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Latin Church

The Latin Church (Latin: Ecclesia Latina) is the largest autonomous (sui iuris) particular church within the Catholic Church,[3] whose members constitute the vast majority of the 1.3 billion Christians in communion with the Pope in Rome. The Latin Church is one of 24 churches sui iuris in communion with the pope; the other 23 are referred to as the Eastern Catholic Churches, and have approximately 18 million members combined. The Latin Church traditionally employs the Latin liturgical rites, which since the mid-twentieth century are very often translated into the vernacular language. The predominant liturgical rite is the Roman Rite, elements of which have been practiced since the fourth century.[4]


Latin Church
Latin: Ecclesia Latina
TypeParticular church (sui iuris)
ClassificationCatholic
OrientationWestern Christianity
ScriptureBible (Vulgate)
TheologyCatholic theology
PolityEpiscopal[1]
GovernanceHoly See
PopeFrancis
RegionMainly in Western Europe, Central Europe, the Americas, the Philippines, pockets of Africa, Madagascar, Oceania, with several episcopal conferences around the world
LanguageEcclesiastical Latin
LiturgyLatin liturgical rites
HeadquartersArchbasilica of Saint John Lateran, Rome, Italy
FounderApostles Peter and Paul
Origin1st century
Rome, Roman Empire
Separations
Members1.311 billion (2018)[2][citation needed]
Other name(s)
  • Western Church
  • Latin Catholic Church
  • Roman Catholic Church
Official websiteHoly See

The Latin Church is directly headed by the Pope in his role as the Bishop of Rome, whose cathedra as a bishop is located in the Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran in Rome, Italy. The Latin Church historically developed within, and has strongly influenced Western culture; as such, it is also known as the Western Church (Latin: Ecclesia Occidentalis). It is also known as the Roman Church (Latin: Ecclesia Romana),[3] the Latin Catholic Church,[5][6] and in some contexts as the Roman Catholic Church (though this name can also refer to the Catholic Church as a whole).[7][N 1] One of the pope's traditional titles in some eras and contexts has been the Patriarch of the West.

The Catholic Church teaches that its bishops are the successors of Jesus' apostles, and that the Pope is the successor to Saint Peter upon whom primacy was conferred by Jesus Christ.[8] Within the substantial cultural and theological unity of the Latin Church, local traditions flourished in ancient times as is exemplified by the different theological methodologies of four major figures known as the Latin Doctors of the Church who lived in the 2nd–7th centuries in territories which included Roman north Africa and Palestine.

As regards liturgical forms, there exist and have existed since ancient times differing traditions of Latin liturgical rites, of which the predominant has been the Roman Rite. Of other liturgical families, the main survivors are what is now referred to officially as the Hispano-Mozarabic Rite, still in restricted use in Spain; the Ambrosian Rite, centred geographically on the Archdiocese of Milan, in Italy, and much closer in form, though not specific content, to the Roman Rite; and the Carthusian Rite, practised within the strict Carthusian monastic Order, which also employs in general terms forms similar to the Roman Rite, but with a number of significant divergences which have adapted it to the distinctive way of life of the Carthusians. There once existed what is referred to as the Gallican Rite, used in Gaulish or Frankish territories. This was a conglomeration of varying forms, not unlike the present Hispano-Mozarabic Rite in its general structures, but never strictly codified and which from at least the seventh century was gradually infiltrated, and then eventually for the most part replaced, by liturgical texts and forms which had their origin in the diocese of Rome. Other former "Rites" in past times practised in certain religious orders and important cities were in truth usually partial variants upon the Roman Rite and have almost entirely disappeared from current use, despite limited nostalgic efforts at revival of some of them and a certain indulgence by the Roman authorities.

The Latin Church was in full communion with what is referred to as the Eastern Orthodox Church until the East-West schism of Rome and Constantinople in 1054. From that time, but also before it, it became common to refer to Western Christians as Latins in contrast to Byzantines or Greeks. Following the Islamic conquests, the Crusades were launched by the West from 1095 to 1291 in order to defend Christians and their properties in the Holy Land against persecution. In the long term the Crusaders did not succeed in re-establishing political and military control of Israel and Judaea, which like former Christian North Africa and the rest of the Middle East remained under Islamic domination. The names of many former Christian dioceses of this vast area are still used by the Catholic Church as the names of Catholic titular sees, irrespective of liturgical families.

The division between "Latins" and "Greeks" does not cover the whole panoply of traditional Christian churches, since it leaves seriously out of reckoning the sizeable Eastern Catholic Churches, some of which follow the Byzantine liturgical tradition, but others, along with various ancient churches outside the Chalcedonian Christianity jointly known as the Oriental Orthodoxy, and outside the Pentarchical state church of Roman Empire, known as the Church of the East, and follow the greatly varying cultural, spiritual and liturgical traditions of Syro-Oriental, Syro-Antiochene, Armenian and Coptic Christianity.

In the early modern period and subsequently, the Latin Church carried out evangelizing missions to America, and from the late modern period to Sub-Saharan Africa and East Asia. The Protestant Reformation in the 16th century resulted in Protestantism breaking away, resulting in the fragmentation of Western Christianity, including not only Protestant offshoots of the Latin Church, but also smaller groups of 19th-century break-away Independent Catholic denominations.

Terminology

Name

The part of the Catholic Church in the West is called the Latin Church to distinguish itself from Eastern Catholic Churches, which are also under the pope's primacy. In historical context, before the East–West Schism in 1054 the Latin Church is sometimes referred to as the Western Church. Writers belonging to various Protestant denominations sometimes choose to use the term Western Church as an implicit claim to legitimacy.

The term Latin Catholic refers to followers of the Latin liturgical rites, of which the Roman Rite is predominant. The Latin liturgical rites are contrasted with the liturgical rites of the Eastern Catholic Churches.

"Church" and "rite"

The 1990 Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches defines the use within that code of the words "church" and "rite".[9][10] In accordance with these definitions of usage within the code that governs the Eastern Catholic Churches, the Latin Church is one such group of Christian faithful united by a hierarchy and recognized by the supreme authority of the Catholic Church as a sui iuris particular Church. The "Latin Rite" is the whole of the patrimony of that distinct particular church, by which it manifests its own manner of living the faith, including its own liturgy, its theology, its spiritual practices and traditions and its canon law. A Catholic, as an individual person, is necessarily a member of a particular church. A person also inherits, or "is of",[11][12][13][14][15] a particular patrimony or rite. Since the rite has liturgical, theological, spiritual and disciplinary elements, a person is also to worship, to be catechized, to pray and to be governed according to a particular rite.

Particular churches that inherit and perpetuate a particular patrimony are identified by the metonymy "church" or "rite". Accordingly, "Rite" has been defined as "a division of the Christian Church using a distinctive liturgy",[16] or simply as "a Christian Church".[17] In this sense, "Rite" and "Church" are treated as synonymous, as in the glossary prepared by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and revised in 1999, which states that each "Eastern-rite (Oriental) Church ... is considered equal to the Latin rite within the Church".[18] The Second Vatican Council likewise stated that "it is the mind of the Catholic Church that each individual Church or Rite should retain its traditions whole and entire and likewise that it should adapt its way of life to the different needs of time and place"[19] and spoke of patriarchs and of "major archbishops, who rule the whole of some individual Church or Rite".[20] It thus used the word "Rite" as "a technical designation of what may now be called a particular Church".[21] "Church or rite" is also used as a single heading in the United States Library of Congress classification of works.[22]

History

Historically, the governing entity of the Latin Church (i.e. the Holy See) has been viewed as one of the five patriarchates of the Pentarchy of early Christianity, along with the patriarchates of Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem. Due to geographic and cultural considerations, the latter patriarchates developed into churches with distinct Eastern Christian traditions. This scheme, tacitly at least accepted by Rome, is constructed from the viewpoint of Greek Christianity and does not take into consideration other churches of great antiquity which developed in the East outside the frontiers of the Roman Empire. The majority of Eastern Christian Churches broke full communion with the Bishop of Rome and the Latin Church, following various theological and jurisdictional disputes in the centuries following the Council of Chalcedon in AD 451. These included notably the Nestorian Schism (431–544) (Church of the East), Chalcedonian Schism (451) (Oriental Orthodoxy), and the East-West Schism (1054) (Eastern Orthodoxy).[23] The Protestant Reformation of the 16th century saw a schism which was not analogous since it was not based upon the same historical factors and involved far more profound theological dissent from the teaching of the totality of previously existing historical Christian churches. Until 2005, the Pope claimed the title "Patriarch of the West"; Pope Benedict XVI set aside this title for reasons that are not completely clear while continuing to exercise a direct de facto patriarchal role over the Latin Church.

Membership

In the Catholic Church, in addition to the Latin Church—directly headed by the Pope as Latin patriarch and notable within Western Christianity for its sacred tradition and seven sacraments— there are 23 Eastern Catholic Churches, self-governing particular churches sui iuris with their own hierarchies. These churches trace their origins to the other four patriarchates of the ancient pentarchy, but either never historically broke full communion or returned to it with the Papacy at some time. These differ from each other in liturgical rite (ceremonies, vestments, chants, language), devotional traditions, theology, canon law, and clergy, but all maintain the same faith, and all see full communion with the Pope as Bishop of Rome as essential to being Catholic as well as part of the one true church as defined by the Four Marks of the Church in Catholic ecclesiology.

The approximately 16 million Eastern Catholics represent a minority of Christians in communion with the Pope, compared to well over 1 billion Latin Catholics. Additionally, there are roughly 250 million Eastern Orthodox and 86 million Oriental Orthodox around the world that are not in union with Rome. Unlike the Latin Church, the Pope does not exercise a direct patriarchal role over the Eastern Catholic churches and their faithful, instead encouraging their internal hierarchies separate from that of the Latin Church, analogous to the traditions shared with the corresponding Eastern Christian churches in Eastern and Oriental Orthodoxy.[23]

Organisation

Liturgical patrimony

Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict XVI) described the Latin liturgical rites on 24 October 1998:[24]

Several forms of the Latin rite have always existed, and were only slowly withdrawn, as a result of the coming together of the different parts of Europe. Before the Council there existed, side by side with the Roman rite, the Ambrosian rite, the Mozarabic rite of Toledo, the rite of Braga, the Carthusian rite, the Carmelite rite, and best known of all, the Dominican rite, and perhaps still other rites of which I am not aware.

Today, the most common Latin liturgical rites are the Roman Rite—either the post-Vatican II Mass promulgated by Pope Paul VI in 1969 and revised by Pope John Paul II in 2002 (the "Ordinary Form"), or the 1962 form of the Tridentine Mass (the "Extraordinary Form"); the Ambrosian Rite; the Mozarabic Rite; and variations of the Roman Rite (such as the Anglican Use). The 23 Eastern Catholic Churches employ five different families of liturgical rites. The Latin liturgical rites are used only in a single sui iuris particular church.

Disciplinary patrimony

Canon law for the Latin Church is codified in the Code of Canon Law, of which there have been two codifications, the first promulgated by Pope Benedict XV in 1917 and the second by Pope John Paul II in 1983.[25]

In the Latin Church, the norm for administration of confirmation is that, except when in danger of death, the person to be confirmed should "have the use of reason, be suitably instructed, properly disposed, and able to renew the baptismal promises",[26] and "the administration of the Most Holy Eucharist to children requires that they have sufficient knowledge and careful preparation so that they understand the mystery of Christ according to their capacity and are able to receive the body of Christ with faith and devotion."[27] In the Eastern Churches these sacraments are usually administered immediately after baptism, even for an infant.[28]

Celibacy, as a consequence of the duty to observe perfect continence, is obligatory for priests in the Latin Church.[29] An exception is made for married clergy from other churches, who join the Catholic Church; they may continue as married priests.[30] In the Latin Church, a married man may not be admitted even to the diaconate unless he is legitimately destined to remain a deacon and not become a priest.[31] Marriage after ordination is not possible, and attempting it can result in canonical penalties.[32] The Eastern Catholic Churches, unlike the Latin Church, have a married clergy.

At the present time, Bishops in the Latin Church are generally appointed by the Pope after hearing the advice of the various dicasteries of the Roman Curia, specifically the Congregation for Bishops, the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples (for countries in its care), the Section for Relations with States of the Secretariat of State (for appointments that require the consent or prior notification of civil governments), and the Congregation for the Oriental Churches (in the areas in its charge, even for the appointment of Latin bishops). The Congregations generally work from a "terna" or list of three names advanced to them by the local church, most often through the Apostolic Nuncio or the Cathedral Chapter in those places where the Chapter retains the right to nominate bishops.[citation needed]

Theology and philosophy

Augustinianism

 
St. Augustine by Peter Paul Rubens, 1636-1638

Augustine of Hippo was a Roman African, philosopher and bishop in the Catholic Church. He helped shape Latin Christianity, and is viewed as one of the most important Church Fathers in the Latin Church for his writings in the Patristic Period. Among his works are The City of God, De doctrina Christiana, and Confessions.

In his youth he was drawn to Manichaeism and later to neoplatonism. After his baptism and conversion in 386, Augustine developed his own approach to philosophy and theology, accommodating a variety of methods and perspectives.[33] Believing that the grace of Christ was indispensable to human freedom, he helped formulate the doctrine of original sin and made seminal contributions to the development of just war theory. His thoughts profoundly influenced the medieval worldview. The segment of the church that adhered to the concept of the Trinity as defined by the Council of Nicaea and the Council of Constantinople[34] closely identified with Augustine's On the Trinity

When the Western Roman Empire began to disintegrate, Augustine imagined the church as a spiritual City of God, distinct from the material Earthly City.[35] in his book On the city of God against the pagans, often called The City of God, Augustine declared its message to be spiritual rather than political. Christianity, he argued, should be concerned with the mystical, heavenly city, the New Jerusalem, rather than with earthly politics.

The City of God presents human history as a conflict between what Augustine calls the Earthly City (often colloquially referred to as the City of Man, but never by Augustine) and the City of God, a conflict that is destined to end in victory for the latter. The City of God is marked by people who forego earthly pleasure to dedicate themselves to the eternal truths of God, now revealed fully in the Christian faith. The Earthly City, on the other hand, consists of people who have immersed themselves in the cares and pleasures of the present, passing world.

 
Portrait of Augustine by Philippe de Champaigne, 17th century

For Augustine, the Logos "took on flesh" in Christ, in whom the logos was present as in no other man.[36][37][38] He strongly influenced Early Medieval Christian Philosophy.[39]

Like other Church Fathers such as Athenagoras,[40] Tertullian,[41] Clement of Alexandria and Basil of Caesarea,[42] Augustine "vigorously condemned the practice of induced abortion", and although he disapproved of an abortion during any stage of pregnancy, he made a distinction between early abortions and later ones.[43] He acknowledged the distinction between "formed" and "unformed" fetuses mentioned in the Septuagint translation of Exodus 21:22–23, which is considered as wrong translation of the word "harm" from the original Hebrew text as "form" in the Greek Septuagint and based in Aristotelian distinction "between the fetus before and after its supposed 'vivification'", and did not classify as murder the abortion of an "unformed" fetus since he thought that it could not be said with certainty that the fetus had already received a soul.[43][44]

Augustine also used the term "Catholic" to distinguish the "true" church from heretical groups:

In the Catholic Church, there are many other things which most justly keep me in her bosom. The consent of peoples and nations keeps me in the Church; so does her authority, inaugurated by miracles, nourished by hope, enlarged by love, established by age. The succession of priests keeps me, beginning from the very seat of the Apostle Peter, to whom the Lord, after His resurrection, gave it in charge to feed His sheep (Jn 21:15–19), down to the present episcopate.

And so, lastly, does the very name of Catholic, which, not without reason, amid so many heresies, the Church has thus retained; so that, though all heretics wish to be called Catholics, yet when a stranger asks where the Catholic Church meets, no heretic will venture to point to his own chapel or house.

Such then in number and importance are the precious ties belonging to the Christian name which keep a believer in the Catholic Church, as it is right they should. ...With you, there is none of these things to attract or keep me. ...No one shall move me from the faith which binds my mind with ties so many and so strong to the Christian religion. ...For my part, I should not believe the gospel except as moved by the authority of the Catholic Church. 

— St. Augustine (354–430): Against the Epistle of Manichaeus called Fundamental, chapter 4: Proofs of the Catholic Faith.[45]
 
Saint Augustine of Hippo by Gerard Seghers (attributed)

In both his philosophical and theological reasoning, Augustine was greatly influenced by Stoicism, Platonism and Neoplatonism, particularly by the work of Plotinus, author of the Enneads, probably through the mediation of Porphyry and Victorinus (as Pierre Hadot has argued). Although he later abandoned Neoplatonism, some ideas are still visible in his early writings.[46] His early and influential writing on the human will, a central topic in ethics, would become a focus for later philosophers such as Schopenhauer, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche. He was also influenced by the works of Virgil (known for his teaching on language), and Cicero (known for his teaching on argument).[47]

In the East, his teachings are more disputed, and were notably attacked by John Romanides.[48] But other theologians and figures of the Eastern Orthodox Church have shown significant approbation of his writings, chiefly Georges Florovsky.[49] The most controversial doctrine associated with him, the filioque,[50] was rejected by the Orthodox Church[51] as heretical.[52] Other disputed teachings include his views on original sin, the doctrine of grace, and predestination.[50] Nevertheless, though considered to be mistaken on some points, he is still considered a saint, and has even had influence on some Eastern Church Fathers, most notably the Greek theologian Gregory Palamas.[53] In the Orthodox Church his feast day is celebrated on 15 June.[50][54] Historian Diarmaid MacCulloch has written: "[Augustine's] impact on Western Christian thought can hardly be overstated; only his beloved example Paul of Tarsus has been more influential, and Westerners have generally seen Paul through Augustine's eyes."[55]

In his autobiographical book Milestones, Pope Benedict XVI claims Augustine as one of the deepest influences in his thought.

Scholasticism

 
14th-century image of a university lecture

Scholasticism is a method of critical thought which dominated teaching by the academics ("scholastics", or "schoolmen") of medieval universities in Europe from about 1100 to 1700, The 13th and early 14th centuries are generally seen as the high period of scholasticism. The early 13th century witnessed the culmination of the recovery of Greek philosophy. Schools of translation grew up in Italy and Sicily, and eventually in the rest of Europe. Powerful Norman kings gathered men of knowledge from Italy and other areas into their courts as a sign of their prestige.[56] William of Moerbeke's translations and editions of Greek philosophical texts in the middle half of the thirteenth century helped form a clearer picture of Greek philosophy, particularly of Aristotle, than was given by the Arabic versions on which they had previously relied. Edward Grant writes: "Not only was the structure of the Arabic language radically different from that of Latin, but some Arabic versions had been derived from earlier Syriac translations and were thus twice removed from the original Greek text. Word-for-word translations of such Arabic texts could produce tortured readings. By contrast, the structural closeness of Latin to Greek permitted literal, but intelligible, word-for-word translations."[57]

Universities developed in the large cities of Europe during this period, and rival clerical orders within the church began to battle for political and intellectual control over these centers of educational life. The two main orders founded in this period were the Franciscans and the Dominicans. The Franciscans were founded by Francis of Assisi in 1209. Their leader in the middle of the century was Bonaventure, a traditionalist who defended the theology of Augustine and the philosophy of Plato, incorporating only a little of Aristotle in with the more neoplatonist elements. Following Anselm, Bonaventure supposed that reason can only discover truth when philosophy is illuminated by religious faith.[58] Other important Franciscan scholastics were Duns Scotus, Peter Auriol and William of Ockham.[59][60]

Thomism

 
During the 13th century, Saint Thomas Aquinas sought to reconcile Aristotelian philosophy with Augustinian theology, employing both reason and faith in the study of metaphysics, moral philosophy, and religion. While Aquinas accepted the existence of God on faith, he offered five proofs of God's existence to support such a belief.
 
Detail from Valle Romita Polyptych by Gentile da Fabriano (c. 1400) showing Thomas Aquinas
 
Detail from Triumph of St. Thomas Aquinas over Averroes by Benozzo Gozzoli (1420–97)

Saint Thomas Aquinas,[61][62] an Italian Dominican friar, philosopher and priest, was immensely influential in the tradition of scholasticism, within which he is also known as the Doctor Angelicus and the Doctor Communis.[63]

Aquinas emphasized that "Synderesis is said to be the law of our mind, because it is a habit containing the precepts of the natural law, which are the first principles of human actions."[64][65]

According to Aquinas "…all acts of virtue are prescribed by the natural law, since each one's reason naturally dictates to him to act virtuously. But if we speak of virtuous acts, considered in themselves, i.e., in their proper species, not all virtuous acts are prescribed by the natural law for many things are done virtuously to which nature does not incline at first; but that, through the inquiry of reason, have been found by men to be conducive to well living." Therefore, we must determine if we are speaking of virtuous acts as under the aspect of virtuous or as an act in its species.[66]

Thomas defined the four cardinal virtues as prudence, temperance, justice, and fortitude. The cardinal virtues are natural and revealed in nature, and they are binding on everyone. There are, however, three theological virtues: faith, hope, and charity. Thomas also describes the virtues as imperfect (incomplete) and perfect (complete) virtues. A perfect virtue is any virtue with charity, which completes a cardinal virtue. A non-Christian can display courage, but it would be courage with temperance. A Christian would display courage with charity. These are somewhat supernatural and are distinct from other virtues in their object, namely, God:

Now the object of the theological virtues is God Himself, Who is the last end of all, as surpassing the knowledge of our reason. On the other hand, the object of the intellectual and moral virtues is something comprehensible to human reason. Wherefore the theological virtues are specifically distinct from the moral and intellectual virtues.[67]

Thomas Aquinas wrote: "[Greed] is a sin against God, just as all mortal sins, in as much as man condemns things eternal for the sake of temporal things."[68]

Aquinas also contributed to economic thought as an aspect of ethics and justice. He dealt with the concept of a just price, normally its market price or a regulated price sufficient to cover seller costs of production. He argued it was immoral for sellers to raise their prices simply because buyers were in pressing need for a product.[69][70]

Aquinas later expanded his argument to oppose any unfair earnings made in trade, basing the argument on the Golden Rule. The Christian should "do unto others as you would have them do unto you", meaning he should trade value for value. Aquinas believed that it was specifically immoral to raise prices because a particular buyer had an urgent need for what was being sold and could be persuaded to pay a higher price because of local conditions:

If someone would be greatly helped by something belonging to someone else, and the seller not similarly harmed by losing it, the seller must not sell for a higher price: because the usefulness that goes to the buyer comes not from the seller, but from the buyer's needy condition: no one ought to sell something that doesn't belong to him.[71]
Summa Theologiae, 2-2, q. 77, art. 1

Aquinas would therefore condemn practices such as raising the price of building supplies in the wake of a natural disaster. Increased demand caused by the destruction of existing buildings does not add to a seller's costs, so to take advantage of buyers' increased willingness to pay constituted a species of fraud in Aquinas's view.[72]

Five Ways
 
Saint Augustine of Hippo by Gerard Seghers (attributed)

Thomas believed that the existence of God is self-evident in itself, but not to us. "Therefore I say that this proposition, "God exists", of itself is self-evident, for the predicate is the same as the subject ... Now because we do not know the essence of God, the proposition is not self-evident to us; but needs to be demonstrated by things that are more known to us, though less known in their nature—namely, by effects."[73]

Thomas believed that the existence of God can be demonstrated. Briefly in the Summa theologiae and more extensively in the Summa contra Gentiles, he considered in great detail five arguments for the existence of God, widely known as the quinque viae (Five Ways).

  1. Motion: Some things undoubtedly move, though cannot cause their own motion. Since, as Thomas believed, there can be no infinite chain of causes of motion, there must be a First Mover not moved by anything else, and this is what everyone understands by God.
  2. Causation: As in the case of motion, nothing can cause itself, and an infinite chain of causation is impossible, so there must be a First Cause, called God.
  3. Existence of necessary and the unnecessary: Our experience includes things certainly existing but apparently unnecessary. Not everything can be unnecessary, for then once there was nothing and there would still be nothing. Therefore, we are compelled to suppose something that exists necessarily, having this necessity only from itself; in fact itself the cause for other things to exist.
  4. Gradation: If we can notice a gradation in things in the sense that some things are more hot, good, etc., there must be a superlative that is the truest and noblest thing, and so most fully existing. This then, we call God.
  5. Ordered tendencies of nature: A direction of actions to an end is noticed in all bodies following natural laws. Anything without awareness tends to a goal under the guidance of one who is aware. This we call God.[74]

Concerning the nature of God, Thomas felt the best approach, commonly called the via negativa, is to consider what God is not. This led him to propose five statements about the divine qualities:

  1. God is simple, without composition of parts, such as body and soul, or matter and form.[75]
  2. God is perfect, lacking nothing. That is, God is distinguished from other beings on account of God's complete actuality.[76] Thomas defined God as the Ipse Actus Essendi subsistens, subsisting act of being.[77]
  3. God is infinite. That is, God is not finite in the ways that created beings are physically, intellectually, and emotionally limited. This infinity is to be distinguished from infinity of size and infinity of number.[78]
  4. God is immutable, incapable of change on the levels of God's essence and character.[79]
  5. God is one, without diversification within God's self. The unity of God is such that God's essence is the same as God's existence. In Thomas's words, "in itself the proposition 'God exists' is necessarily true, for in it subject and predicate are the same."[80]
Impact

Aquinas shifted Scholasticism away from neoplatonism and towards Aristotle. The ensuing school of thought, through its influence on Latin Christianity and the ethics of the Catholic school, is one of the most influential philosophies of all time, also significant due to the number of people living by its teachings.

In theology, his Summa Theologica is one of the most influential documents in medieval theology and continued into the 20th century to be the central point of reference for the philosophy and theology of Latin Christianity. In the 1914 encyclical Doctoris Angelici[81] Pope Pius X cautioned that the teachings of the Catholic Church cannot be understood without the basic philosophical underpinnings of Aquinas' major theses:

The capital theses in the philosophy of St. Thomas are not to be placed in the category of opinions capable of being debated one way or another, but are to be considered as the foundations upon which the whole science of natural and divine things is based; if such principles are once removed or in any way impaired, it must necessarily follow that students of the sacred sciences will ultimately fail to perceive so much as the meaning of the words in which the dogmas of divine revelation are proposed by the magistracy of the Church.[82]

The Second Vatican Council described Aquinas' system as the "Perennial Philosophy".[83]

Actus purus

Actus purus is the absolute perfection of God. According to Scholasticism, created beings have potentiality—that is not actuality, imperfections as well as perfection. Only God is simultaneously all that He can be, infinitely real and infinitely perfect: 'I am who I am' (Exodus 3:14). His attributes or His operations are really identical with His essence, and His essence necessitates His existence.

Lack of essence-energies distinction

Later, the Eastern Orthodox ascetic and archbishop of Thessaloniki, (Saint) Gregory Palamas argued in defense of hesychast spirituality, the uncreated character of the light of the Transfiguration, and the distinction between God's essence and energies. His teaching unfolded over the course of three major controversies, (1) with the Italo-Greek Barlaam between 1336 and 1341, (2) with the monk Gregory Akindynos between 1341 and 1347, and (3) with the philosopher Gregoras, from 1348 to 1355. His theological contributions are sometimes referred to as Palamism, and his followers as Palamites.

Historically Latin Christianity has tended to reject Palamism, especially the essence-energies distinction, some times characterizing it as a heretical introduction of an unacceptable division in the Trinity and suggestive of polytheism.[84][85] Further, the associated practice of hesychasm used to achieve theosis was characterized as "magic".[86][87] More recently, some Roman Catholic thinkers have taken a positive view of Palamas's teachings, including the essence-energies distinction, arguing that it does not represent an insurmountable theological division between Roman Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy,[88] and his feast day as a saint is celebrated by some Byzantine Catholic churches in communion with Rome.[89][90]

The rejection of Palamism by the West and by those in the East who favoured union with the West (the "Latinophrones"), actually contributed to its acceptance in the East, according to Martin Jugie, who adds: "Very soon Latinism and Antipalamism, in the minds of many, would come to be seen as one and the same thing".[91]

Filioque

 
The "Shield of the Trinity" or Scutum Fidei diagram of traditional medieval Western Christian symbolism

Filioque is a Latin term added to the original Nicene Creed, and which has been the subject of great controversy between Eastern and Western Christianity. It is not in the original text of the Creed, attributed to the First Council of Constantinople (381), the second ecumenical council, which says that the Holy Spirit proceeds "from the Father", without additions of any kind, such as "and the Son" or "alone".[92]

The phrase Filioque first appears as an anti-Arian[93][94] interpolation in the Creed at the Third Council of Toledo (589), at which Visigothic Spain renounced Arianism, accepting Catholic Christianity. The addition was confirmed by subsequent local councils in Toledo and soon spread throughout the West, not only in Spain but also in the kingdom of the Franks, who had adopted the Catholic faith in 496,[95] and in England, where the Council of Hatfield imposed it in 680 as a response to Monothelitism.[96] However, it was not adopted in Rome.

In the late 6th century, some Latin churches added the words "and from the Son" (Filioque) to the description of the procession of the Holy Spirit, in what many Eastern Orthodox Christians have at a later stage argued is a violation of Canon VII of the Council of Ephesus, since the words were not included in the text by either the First Council of Nicaea or that of Constantinople.[97] This was incorporated into the liturgical practice of Rome in 1014,[98] but was rejected by Eastern Christianity.

Whether that term Filioque is included, as well as how it is translated and understood, can have important implications for how one understands the doctrine of the Trinity, which is central to the majority of Christian churches. For some, the term implies a serious underestimation of God the Father's role in the Trinity; for others, denial of what it expresses implies a serious underestimation of the role of God the Son in the Trinity.

The Filioque phrase has been included in the Creed throughout all the Latin Rite except where Greek is used in the liturgy,[99][100] although it was never adopted by Eastern Catholic Churches.[101]

Purgatory

 
Impression of purgatory by Peter Paul Rubens

Perhaps the most peculiar doctrine of Latin Christianity is purgatory, about which Latin Christianity holds that "all who die in God's grace and friendship but still imperfectly purified" undergo the process of purification which the Catholic Church calls purgatory, "so as to achieve the holiness necessary to enter the joy of heaven". It has formulated this doctrine by reference to biblical verses that speak of purifying fire (1 Corinthians 3:15 and 1 Peter 1:7) and to the mention by Jesus of forgiveness in the age to come (Matthew 12:32). It bases its teaching also on the practice of praying for the dead in use within the church ever since the church began and which is mentioned even earlier in 2 Macc 12:46.[102][103]

The idea of purgatory has roots that date back into antiquity. A sort of proto-purgatory called the "celestial Hades" appears in the writings of Plato and Heraclides Ponticus and in many other pagan writers. This concept is distinguished from the Hades of the underworld described in the works of Homer and Hesiod. In contrast, the celestial Hades was understood as an intermediary place where souls spent an undetermined time after death before either moving on to a higher level of existence or being reincarnated back on earth. Its exact location varied from author to author. Heraclides of Pontus thought it was in the Milky Way; the Academicians, the Stoics, Cicero, Virgil, Plutarch, the Hermetical writings situated it between the Moon and the Earth or around the Moon; while Numenius and the Latin Neoplatonists thought it was located between the sphere of the fixed stars and the Earth.[104]

Perhaps under the influence of Hellenistic thought, the intermediate state entered Jewish religious thought in the last centuries before Christ. In Maccabees, we find the practice of prayer for the dead with a view to their after life purification,[105] a practice accepted by some Christians. The same practice appears in other traditions, such as the medieval Chinese Buddhist practice of making offerings on behalf of the dead, who are said to suffer numerous trials.[106] Among other reasons, Western Catholic teaching of purgatory is based on the pre-Christian (Judaic) practice of prayers for the dead.[107]

 
Image of a fiery purgatory by Ludovico Carracci

Specific examples of belief in a purification after death and of the communion of the living with the dead through prayer are found in many of the Church Fathers.[108] Irenaeus (c. 130–202) mentioned an abode where the souls of the dead remained until the universal judgment, a process that has been described as one which "contains the concept of ... purgatory".[109] Both Clement of Alexandria (c. 150–215) and his pupil Origen of Alexandria (c. 185–254) developed a view of purification after death;[110] this view drew upon the notion that fire is a divine instrument from the Old Testament, and understood this in the context of New Testament teachings such as baptism by fire, from the Gospels, and a purificatory trial after death, from St. Paul.[111] Origen, in arguing against soul sleep, stated that the souls of the elect immediately entered paradise unless not yet purified, in which case they passed into a state of punishment, a penal fire, which is to be conceived as a place of purification.[112] For both Clement and Origen, the fire was neither a material thing nor a metaphor, but a "spiritual fire".[113] The early Latin author Tertullian (c. 160–225) also articulated a view of purification after death.[114] In Tertullian's understanding of the afterlife, the souls of martyrs entered directly into eternal blessedness,[115] whereas the rest entered a generic realm of the dead. There the wicked suffered a foretaste of their eternal punishments,[115] whilst the good experienced various stages and places of bliss wherein "the idea of a kind of purgatory … is quite plainly found," an idea that is representative of a view widely dispersed in antiquity.[116] Later examples, wherein further elaborations are articulated, include St. Cyprian (d. 258),[117] St. John Chrysostom (c. 347–407),[118] and St. Augustine (354–430),[119] among others.

Pope Gregory the Great's Dialogues, written in the late 6th century, evidence a development in the understanding of the afterlife distinctive of the direction that Latin Christendom would take:

As for certain lesser faults, we must believe that, before the Final Judgment, there is a purifying fire. He who is truth says that whoever utters blasphemy against the Holy Spirit will be pardoned neither in this age nor in the age to come. From this sentence we understand that certain offenses can be forgiven in this age, but certain others in the age to come.[120]

Speculations and imaginings about purgatory

 
Dante gazes at purgatory (shown as a mountain) in this 16th-century painting.

Some Catholic saints and theologians have had sometimes conflicting ideas about purgatory beyond those adopted by the Catholic Church, reflecting or contributing to the popular image, which includes the notions of purification by actual fire, in a determined place and for a precise length of time. Paul J. Griffiths notes: "Recent Catholic thought on purgatory typically preserves the essentials of the basic doctrine while also offering second-hand speculative interpretations of these elements."[121] Thus Joseph Ratzinger wrote: "Purgatory is not, as Tertullian thought, some kind of supra-worldly concentration camp where man is forced to undergo punishment in a more or less arbitrary fashion. Rather it is the inwardly necessary process of transformation in which a person becomes capable of Christ, capable of God, and thus capable of unity with the whole communion of saints."[122]

In Theological Studies, John E. Thiel argued that "purgatory virtually disappeared from Catholic belief and practice since Vatican II" because it has been based on "a competitive spirituality, gravitating around the religious vocation of ascetics from the late Middle Ages". "The birth of purgatory negotiated the eschatological anxiety of the laity. [...] In a manner similar to the ascetic’s lifelong lengthening of the temporal field of competition with the martyr, belief in purgatory lengthened the layperson’s temporal field of competition with the ascetic."[123]

The speculations and popular imaginings that, especially in late medieval times, were common in the Western or Latin Church have not necessarily found acceptance in the Eastern Catholic Churches, of which there are 23 in full communion with the Pope. Some have explicitly rejected the notions of punishment by fire in a particular place that are prominent in the popular picture of purgatory. The representatives of the Eastern Orthodox Church at the Council of Florence argued against these notions, while declaring that they do hold that there is a cleansing after death of the souls of the saved and that these are assisted by the prayers of the living: "If souls depart from this life in faith and charity but marked with some defilements, whether unrepented minor ones or major ones repented of but without having yet borne the fruits of repentance, we believe that within reason they are purified of those faults, but not by some purifying fire and particular punishments in some place."[124] The definition of purgatory adopted by that council excluded the two notions with which the Orthodox disagreed and mentioned only the two points that, they said, were part of their faith also. Accordingly, the agreement, known as the Union of Brest, that formalized the admission of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church into the full communion of the Roman Catholic Church stated: "We shall not debate about purgatory, but we entrust ourselves to the teaching of the Holy Church".[125]

Mary Magdalene of Bethany

 
The Penitent Magdalene by Guido Reni

In the medieval Western tradition, Mary of Bethany the sister of Lazarus was identified as Mary Magdalene perhaps in large part because of a homily given by Pope Gregory the Great in which he taught about several women in the New Testament as though they were the same person. This led to a conflation of Mary of Bethany with Mary Magdalene as well as with another woman (besides Mary of Bethany who anointed Jesus), the woman caught in adultery. Eastern Christianity never adopted this identification. In his article in the 1910 Catholic Encyclopedia, Hugh Pope stated, "The Greek Fathers, as a whole, distinguish the three persons: the 'sinner' of Luke 7:36–50; the sister of Martha and Lazarus, Luke 10:38–42 and John 11; and Mary Magdalen.[126]

French scholar Victor Saxer dates the identification of Mary Magdalene as a prostitute, and as Mary of Bethany, to a sermon by Pope Gregory the Great on September 21, AD 591, where he seemed to combine the actions of three women mentioned in the New Testament and also identified an unnamed woman as Mary Magdalene. In another sermon, Gregory specifically identified Mary Magdalene as the sister of Martha mentioned in Luke 10.[127] But according to a view expressed more recently by theologian Jane Schaberg, Gregory only put the final touch to a legend that already existed before him.[128]

Latin Christianity's identification of Mary Magdalene and Mary of Bethany was reflected in the arrangement of the General Roman Calendar until this was altered in 1969,[129] reflecting the fact that by then the common interpretation in the Catholic Church was that Mary of Bethany, Mary Magdalene and the sinful woman who anointed the feet of Jesus were three distinct women.[130]

Original sin

The Catechism of the Catholic Church says:

By his sin Adam, as the first man, lost the original holiness and justice he had received from God, not only for himself but for all humans.

Adam and Eve transmitted to their descendants human nature wounded by their own first sin and hence deprived of original holiness and justice; this deprivation is called "original sin".

As a result of original sin, human nature is weakened in its powers, subject to ignorance, suffering and the domination of death, and inclined to sin (this inclination is called "concupiscence").[131]

 
Michelangelo's painting of the sin of Adam and Eve from the Sistine Chapel ceiling

The concept of original sin was first alluded to in the 2nd century by St Irenaeus, Bishop of Lyon in his controversy with certain dualist Gnostics.[132] Other church fathers such as Augustine also shaped and developed the doctrine,[133][134] seeing it as based on the New Testament teaching of Paul the Apostle (Romans 5:12–21 and 1 Corinthians 15:21–22) and the Old Testament verse of Psalm 51:5.[135][136][137][138][139] Tertullian, Cyprian, Ambrose and Ambrosiaster considered that humanity shares in Adam's sin, transmitted by human generation. Augustine's formulation of original sin after AD 412 was popular among Protestant reformers, such as Martin Luther and John Calvin, who equated original sin with concupiscence (or "hurtful desire"), affirming that it persisted even after baptism and completely destroyed freedom to do good. Before 412, Augustine said that free will was weakened but not destroyed by original sin.[134] But after 412 this changed to a loss of free will except to sin.[140] Modern Augustinian Calvinism holds this later view. The Jansenist movement, which the Catholic Church declared to be heretical, also maintained that original sin destroyed freedom of will.[141] Instead the Western Catholic Church declares: "Baptism, by imparting the life of Christ's grace, erases original sin and turns a man back towards God, but the consequences for nature, weakened and inclined to evil, persist in man and summon him to spiritual battle."[142] "Weakened and diminished by Adam's fall, free will is yet not destroyed in the race."[143]

St. Anselm says: "The sin of Adam was one thing but the sin of children at their birth is quite another, the former was the cause, the latter is the effect."[144] In a child, original sin is distinct from the fault of Adam, it is one of its effects. The effects of Adam's sin according to the Catholic Encyclopedia are:

  1. Death and Suffering: "One man has transmitted to the whole human race not only the death of the body, which is the punishment of sin, but even sin itself, which is the death of the soul."
  2. Concupiscence or Inclination to sin. Baptism erases original sin but the inclination to sin remains.
  3. The absence of sanctifying grace in the new-born child is also an effect of the first sin, for Adam, having received holiness and justice from God, lost it not only for himself but also for us. Baptism confers original sanctifying grace, lost through the Adam's sin, thus eliminating original sin and any personal sin.[145]

Eastern Catholics and Eastern Christianity, in general, do not have the same theology of the Fall and original sin as Latin Catholics.[146] But since Vatican II there has been development in Catholic thinking. Some warn against taking Genesis 3 too literally. They take into account that "God had the church in mind before the foundation of the world" (as in Ephesians 1:4).[147] as also in 2 Timothy 1:9: ". . . his own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began."[148] And Pope Benedict XVI in his book In the Beginning ... referred to the term "original sin" as "misleading and unprecise".[149] Benedict does not require a literal interpretation of Genesis, or of the origin or evil, but writes: "How was this possible, how did it happen? This remains obscure. ...Evil remains mysterious. It has been presented in great images, as does chapter 3 of Genesis, with the vision of two trees, of the serpent, of sinful man."[150][151]

Immaculate Conception

 
Inmaculada Concepción by Juan Antonio de Frías y Escalante

The Immaculate Conception is the conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary free from original sin by virtue of the merits of her son Jesus. Although the belief has been widely held since Late Antiquity, the doctrine was dogmatically defined in the Catholic Church only in 1854 when Pope Pius IX declared it ex cathedra, i.e., using papal infallibility, in his papal bull Ineffabilis Deus,[152]

It is admitted that the doctrine as defined by Pius IX was not explicitly noted before the 12th century. It is also agreed that "no direct or categorical and stringent proof of the dogma can be brought forward from Scripture".[153] But it is claimed that the doctrine is implicitly contained in the teaching of the Fathers. Their expressions on the subject of the sinlessness of Mary are, it is pointed out, so ample and so absolute that they must be taken to include original sin as well as actual. Thus in the first five centuries, such epithets as "in every respect holy", "in all things unstained", "super-innocent", and "singularly holy" are applied to her; she is compared to Eve before the fall, as ancestress of a redeemed people; she is "the earth before it was accursed". The well-known words of St. Augustine (d. 430) may be cited: "As regards the mother of God," he says, "I will not allow any question whatever of sin." It is true that he is here speaking directly of actual or personal sin. But his argument is that all men are sinners; that they are so through original depravity; that this original depravity may be overcome by the grace of God, and he adds that he does not know but that Mary may have had sufficient grace to overcome sin "of every sort" (omni ex parte).[154]

Bernard of Clairvaux in the 12th century raised the question of the Immaculate Conception. A feast of the Conception of the Blessed Virgin had already begun to be celebrated in some churches of the West. St Bernard blames the canons of the metropolitan church of Lyon for instituting such a festival without the permission of the Holy See. In doing so, he takes occasion to repudiate altogether the view that the conception of Mary was sinless, calling it a "novelty". Some doubt, however, whether he was using the term "conception" in the same sense in which it is used in the definition of Pope Pius IX. Bernard would seem to have been speaking of conception in the active sense of the mother's cooperation, for in his argument he says: "How can there be absence of sin where there is concupiscence (libido)?" and stronger expressions follow, which could be interpreted to indicate that he was speaking of the mother and not of the child. Yet, Bernard also decries those who support the feast for trying to "add to the glories of Mary", which proves he was indeed talking about Mary.[154]

The theological underpinnings of Immaculate Conception had been the subject of debate during the Middle Ages with opposition provided by figures such as Saint Thomas Aquinas, a Dominican. However, supportive arguments by Franciscans William of Ware and Pelbartus Ladislaus of Temesvár,[155] and general belief among Catholics, made the doctrine more acceptable so that the Council of Basel supported it in the 15th century, but the Council of Trent sidestepped the question. Pope Sixtus IV, a Franciscan, had tried to pacify the situation by forbidding either side to criticize the other, and placed the feast of the Immaculate Conception on the Roman Calendar in 1477, but Pope Pius V, a Dominican, changed it to the feast of the Conception of Mary. Clement XI made the feast universal in 1708, but still did not call it the feast of the Immaculate Conception.[156] Popular and theological support for the concept continued to grow and by the 18th century it was widely depicted in art.[157][158][159][160]

Duns Scotus

 
John Duns Scotus was one of the Scholastic philosophers that argued most for the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary.

The Blessed John Duns Scotus (d. 1308), a Friar Minor like Saint Bonaventure, argued, that from a rational point of view it was certainly as little derogatory to the merits of Christ to assert that Mary was by him preserved from all taint of sin, as to say that she first contracted it and then was delivered.[154] Proposing a solution to the theological problem of reconciling the doctrine with that of universal redemption in Christ, he argued that Mary's immaculate conception did not remove her from redemption by Christ; rather it was the result of a more perfect redemption granted her because of her special role in salvation history.[161]

The arguments of Scotus, combined with a better acquaintance with the language of the early Fathers, gradually prevailed in the schools of the Western Church. In 1387 the university of Paris strongly condemned the opposite view.[154]

Scotus's arguments remained controversial, however, particularly among the Dominicans, who were willing enough to celebrate Mary's sanctificatio (being made free from sin) but, following the Dominican Thomas Aquinas' arguments, continued to insist that her sanctification could not have occurred until after her conception.[153]

Scotus pointed out that Mary's Immaculate Conception enhances Jesus’ redemptive work.[162]

Scotus's argument appears in Pope Pius IX's 1854 declaration of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, "at the first moment of Her conception, Mary was preserved free from the stain of original sin, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ."[163] Scotus's position was hailed as "a correct expression of the faith of the Apostles."[163]

Dogmatically defined

The complete defined dogma of the Immaculate Conception states:

We declare, pronounce, and define that the doctrine which holds that the most Blessed Virgin Mary, in the first instance of her conception, by a singular grace and privilege granted by Almighty God, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the human race, was preserved free from all stain of original sin, is a doctrine revealed by God and therefore to be believed firmly and constantly by all the faithful.[164]Declaramus, pronuntiamus et definimus doctrinam, quae tenet, beatissimam Virginem Mariam in primo instanti suae Conceptionis fuisse singulari omnipotentis Dei gratia et privilegio, intuitu meritorum Christi lesu Salvatoris humani generis, ab omni originalis culpae labe praeservatam immunem, esse a Deo revelatam, atque idcirco ab omnibus fidelibus firmiter constanterque credendam. Quapropter si qui secus ac a Nobis.

Pope Pius IX explicitly affirmed that Mary was redeemed in a manner more sublime. He stated that Mary, rather than being cleansed after sin, was completely prevented from contracting original sin in view of the foreseen merits of Jesus Christ, the Savior of the human race. In Luke 1:47, Mary proclaims: "My spirit has rejoiced in God my Saviour." This is referred to as Mary's pre-redemption by Christ. Since the Second Council of Orange against semi-pelagianism, the Catholic Church has taught that even had man never sinned in the Garden of Eden and was sinless, he would still require God's grace to remain sinless.[165][166]

The definition concerns original sin only, and it makes no declaration about the church's belief that the Blessed Virgin was sinless in the sense of freedom from actual or personal sin.[154] The doctrine teaches that from her conception Mary, being always free from original sin, received the sanctifying grace that would normally come with baptism after birth.

Eastern Catholics and Eastern Christianity, in general, believe that Mary was sinless but they do not have the same theology of the Fall and original sin as Latin Catholics.[146]

Assumption of Mary

 
The Assumption of Mary, Peter Paul Rubens, c. 1626

The Assumption of Mary into Heaven (often shortened to the Assumption) is the bodily taking up of the Virgin Mary into Heaven at the end of her earthly life.

On 1 November 1950, in the Apostolic Constitution Munificentissimus Deus, Pope Pius XII declared the Assumption of Mary as a dogma:

By the authority of our Lord Jesus Christ, of the Blessed Apostles Peter and Paul, and by our own authority, we pronounce, declare, and define it to be a divinely revealed dogma: that the Immaculate Mother of God, the ever Virgin Mary, having completed the course of her earthly life, was assumed body and soul into heavenly glory.[167]

In Pius XII's dogmatic statement, the phrase "having completed the course of her earthly life", leaves open the question of whether the Virgin Mary died before her assumption or not. Mary's assumption is said to have been a divine gift to her as the "Mother of God". Ludwig Ott's view is that, as Mary completed her life as a shining example to the human race, the perspective of the gift of assumption is offered to the whole human race.[168]

Ludwig Ott writes in his book Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma that "the fact of her death is almost generally accepted by the Fathers and Theologians, and is expressly affirmed in the Liturgy of the Church", to which he adds a number of helpful citations. He concludes: "for Mary, death, in consequence of her freedom from original sin and from personal sin, was not a consequence of punishment of sin. However, it seems fitting that Mary's body, which was by nature mortal, should be, in conformity with that of her Divine Son, subject to the general law of death".[169]

 
Titian's Assumption (1516–1518)

The point of her bodily death has not been infallibly defined by any pope. Many Catholics believe that she did not die at all, but was assumed directly into Heaven. The dogmatic definition within the Apostolic Constitution Munificentissimus Deus which, according to Roman Catholic dogma, infallibly proclaims the doctrine of the Assumption leaves open the question of whether, in connection with her departure, Mary underwent bodily death. It does not dogmatically define the point one way or the other, as shown by the words "having completed the course of her earthly life".[170]

Before the dogmatic definition in Deiparae Virginis Mariae Pope Pius XII sought the opinion of Catholic Bishops. A large number of them pointed to the Book of Genesis (3:15) as scriptural support for the dogma.[171] In Munificentissimus Deus (item 39) Pius XII referred to the "struggle against the infernal foe" as in Genesis 3:15 and to "complete victory over the sin and death" as in the Letters of Paul as a scriptural basis for the dogmatic definition, Mary being assumed to heaven as in 1 Corinthians 15:54: "then shall come to pass the saying that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory".[171][172]

Assumption vs. Dormition

The Western Feast of the Assumption is celebrated on 15 August, and the Eastern Orthodox and Greek Catholics celebrate the Dormition of the Mother of God (or Dormition of the Theotokos, the falling asleep of the Mother of God) on the same date, preceded by a 14-day fast period. Eastern Christians believe that Mary died a natural death, that her soul was received by Christ upon death, and that her body was resurrected on the third day after her death and that she was taken up into heaven bodily in anticipation of the general resurrection. Her tomb was found empty on the third day.

 
Icon of the Dormition by Theophan the Greek, 1392

Orthodox tradition is clear and unwavering in regard to the central point [of the Dormition]: the Holy Virgin underwent, as did her Son, a physical death, but her body—like His—was afterwards raised from the dead and she was taken up into heaven, in her body as well as in her soul. She has passed beyond death and judgement, and lives wholly in the Age to Come. The Resurrection of the Body ... has in her case been anticipated and is already an accomplished fact. That does not mean, however, that she is dissociated from the rest of humanity and placed in a wholly different category: for we all hope to share one day in that same glory of the Resurrection of the Body which she enjoys even now.[173]

Many Catholics also believe that Mary first died before being assumed, but they believe that she was miraculously resurrected before being assumed. Others believe she was assumed bodily into Heaven without first dying.[174][175] Either understanding may be legitimately held by Catholics, with Eastern Catholics observing the Feast as the Dormition.

Many theologians note by way of comparison that in the Catholic Church, the Assumption is dogmatically defined, while in the Eastern Orthodox tradition, the Dormition is less dogmatically than liturgically and mystically defined. Such differences spring from a larger pattern in the two traditions, wherein Catholic teachings are often dogmatically and authoritatively defined—in part because of the more centralized structure of the Catholic Church—while in Eastern Orthodoxy, many doctrines are less authoritative.[176]

Ancient of Days

 
The Ancient of Days, watercolor etching from 1794 by William Blake

Ancient of Days is a name for God that appears in the Book of Daniel.

In an early Venetian school Coronation of the Virgin by Giovanni d'Alemagna and Antonio Vivarini, (c. 1443), God the Father is shown in the representation consistently used by other artists later, namely as a patriarch, with benign, yet powerful countenance and with long white hair and a beard, a depiction largely derived from, and justified by, the description of the Ancient of Days in the Old Testament, the nearest approach to a physical description of God in the Old Testament:[177]

... the Ancient of Days did sit, whose garment was white as snow, and the hair of his head like the pure wool: his throne was like the fiery flame, and his wheels as burning fire. (Daniel 7:9)

St Thomas Aquinas recalls that some bring forward the objection that the Ancient of Days matches the person of the Father, without necessarily agreeing with this statement himself.[178]

By the twelfth century depictions of a figure of God the Father, essentially based on the Ancient of Days in the Book of Daniel, had started to appear in French manuscripts and in stained glass church windows in England. In the 14th century the illustrated Naples Bible had a depiction of God the Father in the Burning bush. By the 15th century, the Rohan Book of Hours included depictions of God the Father in human form or anthropomorphic imagery, and by the time of the Renaissance artistic representations of God the Father were freely used in the Western Church.[179]

 
The Ancient of Days, a 14th-century fresco from Ubisi, Georgia

Artistic depictions of God the Father were uncontroversial in Catholic art thereafter, but less common depictions of the Trinity were condemned. In 1745 Pope Benedict XIV explicitly supported the Throne of Mercy depiction, referring to the "Ancient of Days", but in 1786 it was still necessary for Pope Pius VI to issue a papal bull condemning the decision of an Italian church council to remove all images of the Trinity from churches.[180]

The depiction remains rare and often controversial in Eastern Orthodox art. In Eastern Orthodox Church hymns and icons, the Ancient of Days is most properly identified with God the Son or Jesus, and not with God the Father. Most of the eastern church fathers who comment on the passage in Daniel (7:9–10, 13–14) interpreted the elderly figure as a prophetic revelation of the son before his physical incarnation.[181] As such, Eastern Christian art will sometimes portray Jesus Christ as an old man, the Ancient of Days, to show symbolically that he existed from all eternity, and sometimes as a young man, or wise baby, to portray him as he was incarnate. This iconography emerged in the 6th century, mostly in the Eastern Empire with elderly images, although usually not properly or specifically identified as "the Ancient of Days".[182] The first images of the Ancient of Days, so named with an inscription, were developed by iconographers in different manuscripts, the earliest of which are dated to the 11th century. The images in these manuscripts included the inscription "Jesus Christ, Ancient of Days," confirming that this was a way to identify Christ as pre-eternal with the God the Father.[183] Indeed, later, it was declared by the Russian Orthodox Church at the Great Synod of Moscow in 1667 that the Ancient of Days was the Son and not the Father.[184]

Social and cultural issues

Sexual abuse cases

From the 1990s, the issue of sexual abuse of minors by Western Catholic clergy and other church members has become the subject of civil litigation, criminal prosecution, media coverage and public debate in countries around the world. The Western Catholic Church has been criticised for its handling of abuse complaints when it became known that some bishops had shielded accused priests, transferring them to other pastoral assignments where some continued to commit sexual offences.

In response to the scandal, formal procedures have been established to help prevent abuse, encourage the reporting of any abuse that occurs, and to handle such reports promptly, although groups representing victims have disputed their effectiveness.[185] In 2014, Pope Francis instituted the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors for the safeguarding of minors.[186]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The term Roman Catholic Church is also used to refer to the Catholic Church as a whole, especially in a non-Catholic context, while also occasionally used in reference to the Latin Church vis-à-vis the Eastern Catholic Churches. "Do you know differences between Roman, Byzantine Catholic Churches?". The Compass. 2011-11-30. Retrieved 2021-04-08.

References

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  3. ^ a b Fortescue, Adrian (1910). "Latin Church"". Catholic Encyclopedia. no doubt, by a further extension Roman Church may be used as equivalent to Latin Church for the patriarchate
  4. ^ Fr. Adrian Fortescue, The Mass: A Study of the Roman Liturgy, s.l., 1912, p. 213
  5. ^ Faris, John D. (2002). "The Latin Church Sui Iuris". Jurist. 62: 280.
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  14. ^ 479 §2
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  16. ^ Rite, Merriam Webster Dictionary
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  84. ^ John Meyendorff (editor), Gregory Palamas – The Triads, p. xi. Paulist Press, 1983, ISBN 978-0809124473, although that attitude has never been universally prevalent in the Catholic Church and has been even more widely criticised in the catholic theology for the last century (see section 3 of this article). Retrieved on 12 September 2014.
  85. ^ "No doubt the leaders of the party held aloof from these vulgar practices of the more ignorant monks, but on the other hand they scattered broadcast perilous theological theories. Palamas taught that by asceticism one could attain a corporal, i.e. a sense view, or perception, of the Divinity. He also held that in God there was a real distinction between the Divine Essence and Its attributes, and he identified grace as one of the Divine propria making it something uncreated and infinite. These monstrous errors were denounced by the Calabrian Barlaam, by Nicephorus Gregoras, and by Acthyndinus. The conflict began in 1338 and ended only in 1368, with the solemn canonization of Palamas and the official recognition of his heresies. He was declared the 'holy doctor' and 'one of the greatest among the Fathers of the Church', and his writings were proclaimed 'the infallible guide of the Christian Faith'. Thirty years of incessant controversy and discordant councils ended with a resurrection of polytheism" Simon Vailhé (1909). "Greek Church". Catholic Encyclopedia, New York: Robert Appleton Company.
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  87. ^ "No doubt the leaders of the party held aloof from these vulgar practices of the more ignorant monks, but on the other hand they scattered broadcast perilous theological theories. Palamas taught that by asceticism one could attain a corporal, i.e. a sense view, or perception, of the Divinity. He also held that in God there was a real distinction between the Divine Essence and Its attributes, and he identified grace as one of the Divine propria making it something uncreated and infinite. These monstrous errors were denounced by the Calabrian Barlaam, by Nicephorus Gregoras, and by Acthyndinus. The conflict began in 1338 and ended only in 1368, with the solemn canonization of Palamas and the official recognition of his heresies. He was declared the 'holy doctor' and 'one of the greatest among the Fathers of the Church', and his writings were proclaimed 'the infallible guide of the Christian Faith'. Thirty years of incessant controversy and discordant councils ended with a resurrection of polytheism" (Simon Vailhé, "Greek Church" in Catholic Encyclopedia (New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1909)
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Latin Christian redirects here For the music genre see Latin Christian music The Latin Church Latin Ecclesia Latina is the largest autonomous sui iuris particular church within the Catholic Church 3 whose members constitute the vast majority of the 1 3 billion Christians in communion with the Pope in Rome The Latin Church is one of 24 churches sui iuris in communion with the pope the other 23 are referred to as the Eastern Catholic Churches and have approximately 18 million members combined The Latin Church traditionally employs the Latin liturgical rites which since the mid twentieth century are very often translated into the vernacular language The predominant liturgical rite is the Roman Rite elements of which have been practiced since the fourth century 4 Latin ChurchLatin Ecclesia LatinaArchbasilica of Saint John Lateran in Rome ItalyTypeParticular church sui iuris ClassificationCatholicOrientationWestern ChristianityScriptureBible Vulgate TheologyCatholic theologyPolityEpiscopal 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main survivors are what is now referred to officially as the Hispano Mozarabic Rite still in restricted use in Spain the Ambrosian Rite centred geographically on the Archdiocese of Milan in Italy and much closer in form though not specific content to the Roman Rite and the Carthusian Rite practised within the strict Carthusian monastic Order which also employs in general terms forms similar to the Roman Rite but with a number of significant divergences which have adapted it to the distinctive way of life of the Carthusians There once existed what is referred to as the Gallican Rite used in Gaulish or Frankish territories This was a conglomeration of varying forms not unlike the present Hispano Mozarabic Rite in its general structures but never strictly codified and which from at least the seventh century was gradually infiltrated and then eventually for the most part replaced by liturgical texts and forms which had their origin in the diocese of Rome Other former Rites in past times practised in certain religious orders and important cities were in truth usually partial variants upon the Roman Rite and have almost entirely disappeared from current use despite limited nostalgic efforts at revival of some of them and a certain indulgence by the Roman authorities The Latin Church was in full communion with what is referred to as the Eastern Orthodox Church until the East West schism of Rome and Constantinople in 1054 From that time but also before it it became common to refer to Western Christians as Latins in contrast to Byzantines or Greeks Following the Islamic conquests the Crusades were launched by the West from 1095 to 1291 in order to defend Christians and their properties in the Holy Land against persecution In the long term the Crusaders did not succeed in re establishing political and military control of Israel and Judaea which like former Christian North Africa and the rest of the Middle East remained under Islamic domination The names of many former Christian dioceses of this vast area are still used by the Catholic Church as the names of Catholic titular sees irrespective of liturgical families The division between Latins and Greeks does not cover the whole panoply of traditional Christian churches since it leaves seriously out of reckoning the sizeable Eastern Catholic Churches some of which follow the Byzantine liturgical tradition but others along with various ancient churches outside the Chalcedonian Christianity jointly known as the Oriental Orthodoxy and outside the Pentarchical state church of Roman Empire known as the Church of the East and follow the greatly varying cultural spiritual and liturgical traditions of Syro Oriental Syro Antiochene Armenian and Coptic Christianity In the early modern period and subsequently the Latin Church carried out evangelizing missions to America and from the late modern period to Sub Saharan Africa and East Asia The Protestant Reformation in the 16th century resulted in Protestantism breaking away resulting in the fragmentation of Western Christianity including not only Protestant offshoots of the Latin Church but also smaller groups of 19th century break away Independent Catholic denominations Contents 1 Terminology 1 1 Name 1 2 Church and rite 2 History 3 Membership 4 Organisation 4 1 Liturgical patrimony 4 2 Disciplinary patrimony 5 Theology and philosophy 5 1 Augustinianism 5 2 Scholasticism 5 2 1 Thomism 5 2 1 1 Five Ways 5 2 1 2 Impact 5 2 2 Actus purus 5 2 2 1 Lack of essence energies distinction 5 3 Filioque 5 4 Purgatory 5 4 1 Speculations and imaginings about purgatory 5 5 Mary Magdalene of Bethany 5 6 Original sin 5 7 Immaculate Conception 5 7 1 Duns Scotus 5 7 2 Dogmatically defined 5 8 Assumption of Mary 5 8 1 Assumption vs Dormition 5 9 Ancient of Days 6 Social and cultural issues 6 1 Sexual abuse cases 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksTerminology EditSee also Catholic Church Name Catholic term and Roman Catholic term Name Edit The part of the Catholic Church in the West is called the Latin Church to distinguish itself from Eastern Catholic Churches which are also under the pope s primacy In historical context before the East West Schism in 1054 the Latin Church is sometimes referred to as the Western Church Writers belonging to various Protestant denominations sometimes choose to use the term Western Church as an implicit claim to legitimacy The term Latin Catholic refers to followers of the Latin liturgical rites of which the Roman Rite is predominant The Latin liturgical rites are contrasted with the liturgical rites of the Eastern Catholic Churches Church and rite Edit Further information Catholic liturgical rites and particular churches The 1990 Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches defines the use within that code of the words church and rite 9 10 In accordance with these definitions of usage within the code that governs the Eastern Catholic Churches the Latin Church is one such group of Christian faithful united by a hierarchy and recognized by the supreme authority of the Catholic Church as a sui iuris particular Church The Latin Rite is the whole of the patrimony of that distinct particular church by which it manifests its own manner of living the faith including its own liturgy its theology its spiritual practices and traditions and its canon law A Catholic as an individual person is necessarily a member of a particular church A person also inherits or is of 11 12 13 14 15 a particular patrimony or rite Since the rite has liturgical theological spiritual and disciplinary elements a person is also to worship to be catechized to pray and to be governed according to a particular rite Particular churches that inherit and perpetuate a particular patrimony are identified by the metonymy church or rite Accordingly Rite has been defined as a division of the Christian Church using a distinctive liturgy 16 or simply as a Christian Church 17 In this sense Rite and Church are treated as synonymous as in the glossary prepared by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and revised in 1999 which states that each Eastern rite Oriental Church is considered equal to the Latin rite within the Church 18 The Second Vatican Council likewise stated that it is the mind of the Catholic Church that each individual Church or Rite should retain its traditions whole and entire and likewise that it should adapt its way of life to the different needs of time and place 19 and spoke of patriarchs and of major archbishops who rule the whole of some individual Church or Rite 20 It thus used the word Rite as a technical designation of what may now be called a particular Church 21 Church or rite is also used as a single heading in the United States Library of Congress classification of works 22 History Edit Historically the governing entity of the Latin Church i e the Holy See has been viewed as one of the five patriarchates of the Pentarchy of early Christianity along with the patriarchates of Constantinople Alexandria Antioch and Jerusalem Due to geographic and cultural considerations the latter patriarchates developed into churches with distinct Eastern Christian traditions This scheme tacitly at least accepted by Rome is constructed from the viewpoint of Greek Christianity and does not take into consideration other churches of great antiquity which developed in the East outside the frontiers of the Roman Empire The majority of Eastern Christian Churches broke full communion with the Bishop of Rome and the Latin Church following various theological and jurisdictional disputes in the centuries following the Council of Chalcedon in AD 451 These included notably the Nestorian Schism 431 544 Church of the East Chalcedonian Schism 451 Oriental Orthodoxy and the East West Schism 1054 Eastern Orthodoxy 23 The Protestant Reformation of the 16th century saw a schism which was not analogous since it was not based upon the same historical factors and involved far more profound theological dissent from the teaching of the totality of previously existing historical Christian churches Until 2005 the Pope claimed the title Patriarch of the West Pope Benedict XVI set aside this title for reasons that are not completely clear while continuing to exercise a direct de facto patriarchal role over the Latin Church Membership EditIn the Catholic Church in addition to the Latin Church directly headed by the Pope as Latin patriarch and notable within Western Christianity for its sacred tradition and seven sacraments there are 23 Eastern Catholic Churches self governing particular churches sui iuris with their own hierarchies These churches trace their origins to the other four patriarchates of the ancient pentarchy but either never historically broke full communion or returned to it with the Papacy at some time These differ from each other in liturgical rite ceremonies vestments chants language devotional traditions theology canon law and clergy but all maintain the same faith and all see full communion with the Pope as Bishop of Rome as essential to being Catholic as well as part of the one true church as defined by the Four Marks of the Church in Catholic ecclesiology The approximately 16 million Eastern Catholics represent a minority of Christians in communion with the Pope compared to well over 1 billion Latin Catholics Additionally there are roughly 250 million Eastern Orthodox and 86 million Oriental Orthodox around the world that are not in union with Rome Unlike the Latin Church the Pope does not exercise a direct patriarchal role over the Eastern Catholic churches and their faithful instead encouraging their internal hierarchies separate from that of the Latin Church analogous to the traditions shared with the corresponding Eastern Christian churches in Eastern and Oriental Orthodoxy 23 Organisation EditFurther information Holy See Liturgical patrimony Edit Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger later Pope Benedict XVI described the Latin liturgical rites on 24 October 1998 24 Several forms of the Latin rite have always existed and were only slowly withdrawn as a result of the coming together of the different parts of Europe Before the Council there existed side by side with the Roman rite the Ambrosian rite the Mozarabic rite of Toledo the rite of Braga the Carthusian rite the Carmelite rite and best known of all the Dominican rite and perhaps still other rites of which I am not aware Today the most common Latin liturgical rites are the Roman Rite either the post Vatican II Mass promulgated by Pope Paul VI in 1969 and revised by Pope John Paul II in 2002 the Ordinary Form or the 1962 form of the Tridentine Mass the Extraordinary Form the Ambrosian Rite the Mozarabic Rite and variations of the Roman Rite such as the Anglican Use The 23 Eastern Catholic Churches employ five different families of liturgical rites The Latin liturgical rites are used only in a single sui iuris particular church Disciplinary patrimony Edit Main article 1983 Code of Canon Law Canon law for the Latin Church is codified in the Code of Canon Law of which there have been two codifications the first promulgated by Pope Benedict XV in 1917 and the second by Pope John Paul II in 1983 25 In the Latin Church the norm for administration of confirmation is that except when in danger of death the person to be confirmed should have the use of reason be suitably instructed properly disposed and able to renew the baptismal promises 26 and the administration of the Most Holy Eucharist to children requires that they have sufficient knowledge and careful preparation so that they understand the mystery of Christ according to their capacity and are able to receive the body of Christ with faith and devotion 27 In the Eastern Churches these sacraments are usually administered immediately after baptism even for an infant 28 Celibacy as a consequence of the duty to observe perfect continence is obligatory for priests in the Latin Church 29 An exception is made for married clergy from other churches who join the Catholic Church they may continue as married priests 30 In the Latin Church a married man may not be admitted even to the diaconate unless he is legitimately destined to remain a deacon and not become a priest 31 Marriage after ordination is not possible and attempting it can result in canonical penalties 32 The Eastern Catholic Churches unlike the Latin Church have a married clergy At the present time Bishops in the Latin Church are generally appointed by the Pope after hearing the advice of the various dicasteries of the Roman Curia specifically the Congregation for Bishops the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples for countries in its care the Section for Relations with States of the Secretariat of State for appointments that require the consent or prior notification of civil governments and the Congregation for the Oriental Churches in the areas in its charge even for the appointment of Latin bishops The Congregations generally work from a terna or list of three names advanced to them by the local church most often through the Apostolic Nuncio or the Cathedral Chapter in those places where the Chapter retains the right to nominate bishops citation needed Theology and philosophy EditAugustinianism Edit See also Augustinianism New Jerusalem The City of God and Neoplatonism St Augustine by Peter Paul Rubens 1636 1638 Augustine of Hippo was a Roman African philosopher and bishop in the Catholic Church He helped shape Latin Christianity and is viewed as one of the most important Church Fathers in the Latin Church for his writings in the Patristic Period Among his works are The City of God De doctrina Christiana and Confessions In his youth he was drawn to Manichaeism and later to neoplatonism After his baptism and conversion in 386 Augustine developed his own approach to philosophy and theology accommodating a variety of methods and perspectives 33 Believing that the grace of Christ was indispensable to human freedom he helped formulate the doctrine of original sin and made seminal contributions to the development of just war theory His thoughts profoundly influenced the medieval worldview The segment of the church that adhered to the concept of the Trinity as defined by the Council of Nicaea and the Council of Constantinople 34 closely identified with Augustine s On the TrinityWhen the Western Roman Empire began to disintegrate Augustine imagined the church as a spiritual City of God distinct from the material Earthly City 35 in his book On the city of God against the pagans often called The City of God Augustine declared its message to be spiritual rather than political Christianity he argued should be concerned with the mystical heavenly city the New Jerusalem rather than with earthly politics The City of God presents human history as a conflict between what Augustine calls the Earthly City often colloquially referred to as the City of Man but never by Augustine and the City of God a conflict that is destined to end in victory for the latter The City of God is marked by people who forego earthly pleasure to dedicate themselves to the eternal truths of God now revealed fully in the Christian faith The Earthly City on the other hand consists of people who have immersed themselves in the cares and pleasures of the present passing world Portrait of Augustine by Philippe de Champaigne 17th century For Augustine the Logos took on flesh in Christ in whom the logos was present as in no other man 36 37 38 He strongly influenced Early Medieval Christian Philosophy 39 Like other Church Fathers such as Athenagoras 40 Tertullian 41 Clement of Alexandria and Basil of Caesarea 42 Augustine vigorously condemned the practice of induced abortion and although he disapproved of an abortion during any stage of pregnancy he made a distinction between early abortions and later ones 43 He acknowledged the distinction between formed and unformed fetuses mentioned in the Septuagint translation of Exodus 21 22 23 which is considered as wrong translation of the word harm from the original Hebrew text as form in the Greek Septuagint and based in Aristotelian distinction between the fetus before and after its supposed vivification and did not classify as murder the abortion of an unformed fetus since he thought that it could not be said with certainty that the fetus had already received a soul 43 44 Augustine also used the term Catholic to distinguish the true church from heretical groups In the Catholic Church there are many other things which most justly keep me in her bosom The consent of peoples and nations keeps me in the Church so does her authority inaugurated by miracles nourished by hope enlarged by love established by age The succession of priests keeps me beginning from the very seat of the Apostle Peter to whom the Lord after His resurrection gave it in charge to feed His sheep Jn 21 15 19 down to the present episcopate And so lastly does the very name of Catholic which not without reason amid so many heresies the Church has thus retained so that though all heretics wish to be called Catholics yet when a stranger asks where the Catholic Church meets no heretic will venture to point to his own chapel or house Such then in number and importance are the precious ties belonging to the Christian name which keep a believer in the Catholic Church as it is right they should With you there is none of these things to attract or keep me No one shall move me from the faith which binds my mind with ties so many and so strong to the Christian religion For my part I should not believe the gospel except as moved by the authority of the Catholic Church St Augustine 354 430 Against the Epistle of Manichaeus called Fundamental chapter 4 Proofs of the Catholic Faith 45 Saint Augustine of Hippo by Gerard Seghers attributed In both his philosophical and theological reasoning Augustine was greatly influenced by Stoicism Platonism and Neoplatonism particularly by the work of Plotinus author of the Enneads probably through the mediation of Porphyry and Victorinus as Pierre Hadot has argued Although he later abandoned Neoplatonism some ideas are still visible in his early writings 46 His early and influential writing on the human will a central topic in ethics would become a focus for later philosophers such as Schopenhauer Kierkegaard and Nietzsche He was also influenced by the works of Virgil known for his teaching on language and Cicero known for his teaching on argument 47 In the East his teachings are more disputed and were notably attacked by John Romanides 48 But other theologians and figures of the Eastern Orthodox Church have shown significant approbation of his writings chiefly Georges Florovsky 49 The most controversial doctrine associated with him the filioque 50 was rejected by the Orthodox Church 51 as heretical 52 Other disputed teachings include his views on original sin the doctrine of grace and predestination 50 Nevertheless though considered to be mistaken on some points he is still considered a saint and has even had influence on some Eastern Church Fathers most notably the Greek theologian Gregory Palamas 53 In the Orthodox Church his feast day is celebrated on 15 June 50 54 Historian Diarmaid MacCulloch has written Augustine s impact on Western Christian thought can hardly be overstated only his beloved example Paul of Tarsus has been more influential and Westerners have generally seen Paul through Augustine s eyes 55 In his autobiographical book Milestones Pope Benedict XVI claims Augustine as one of the deepest influences in his thought Scholasticism Edit See also Rene Descartes and Cartesianism 14th century image of a university lecture Scholasticism is a method of critical thought which dominated teaching by the academics scholastics or schoolmen of medieval universities in Europe from about 1100 to 1700 The 13th and early 14th centuries are generally seen as the high period of scholasticism The early 13th century witnessed the culmination of the recovery of Greek philosophy Schools of translation grew up in Italy and Sicily and eventually in the rest of Europe Powerful Norman kings gathered men of knowledge from Italy and other areas into their courts as a sign of their prestige 56 William of Moerbeke s translations and editions of Greek philosophical texts in the middle half of the thirteenth century helped form a clearer picture of Greek philosophy particularly of Aristotle than was given by the Arabic versions on which they had previously relied Edward Grant writes Not only was the structure of the Arabic language radically different from that of Latin but some Arabic versions had been derived from earlier Syriac translations and were thus twice removed from the original Greek text Word for word translations of such Arabic texts could produce tortured readings By contrast the structural closeness of Latin to Greek permitted literal but intelligible word for word translations 57 Universities developed in the large cities of Europe during this period and rival clerical orders within the church began to battle for political and intellectual control over these centers of educational life The two main orders founded in this period were the Franciscans and the Dominicans The Franciscans were founded by Francis of Assisi in 1209 Their leader in the middle of the century was Bonaventure a traditionalist who defended the theology of Augustine and the philosophy of Plato incorporating only a little of Aristotle in with the more neoplatonist elements Following Anselm Bonaventure supposed that reason can only discover truth when philosophy is illuminated by religious faith 58 Other important Franciscan scholastics were Duns Scotus Peter Auriol and William of Ockham 59 60 Thomism Edit Further information Thomism Thought of Thomas Aquinas and Summa Theologica During the 13th century Saint Thomas Aquinas sought to reconcile Aristotelian philosophy with Augustinian theology employing both reason and faith in the study of metaphysics moral philosophy and religion While Aquinas accepted the existence of God on faith he offered five proofs of God s existence to support such a belief Detail from Valle Romita Polyptych by Gentile da Fabriano c 1400 showing Thomas Aquinas Detail from Triumph of St Thomas Aquinas over Averroes by Benozzo Gozzoli 1420 97 Saint Thomas Aquinas 61 62 an Italian Dominican friar philosopher and priest was immensely influential in the tradition of scholasticism within which he is also known as the Doctor Angelicus and the Doctor Communis 63 Aquinas emphasized that Synderesis is said to be the law of our mind because it is a habit containing the precepts of the natural law which are the first principles of human actions 64 65 According to Aquinas all acts of virtue are prescribed by the natural law since each one s reason naturally dictates to him to act virtuously But if we speak of virtuous acts considered in themselves i e in their proper species not all virtuous acts are prescribed by the natural law for many things are done virtuously to which nature does not incline at first but that through the inquiry of reason have been found by men to be conducive to well living Therefore we must determine if we are speaking of virtuous acts as under the aspect of virtuous or as an act in its species 66 Thomas defined the four cardinal virtues as prudence temperance justice and fortitude The cardinal virtues are natural and revealed in nature and they are binding on everyone There are however three theological virtues faith hope and charity Thomas also describes the virtues as imperfect incomplete and perfect complete virtues A perfect virtue is any virtue with charity which completes a cardinal virtue A non Christian can display courage but it would be courage with temperance A Christian would display courage with charity These are somewhat supernatural and are distinct from other virtues in their object namely God Now the object of the theological virtues is God Himself Who is the last end of all as surpassing the knowledge of our reason On the other hand the object of the intellectual and moral virtues is something comprehensible to human reason Wherefore the theological virtues are specifically distinct from the moral and intellectual virtues 67 Thomas Aquinas wrote Greed is a sin against God just as all mortal sins in as much as man condemns things eternal for the sake of temporal things 68 Aquinas also contributed to economic thought as an aspect of ethics and justice He dealt with the concept of a just price normally its market price or a regulated price sufficient to cover seller costs of production He argued it was immoral for sellers to raise their prices simply because buyers were in pressing need for a product 69 70 Aquinas later expanded his argument to oppose any unfair earnings made in trade basing the argument on the Golden Rule The Christian should do unto others as you would have them do unto you meaning he should trade value for value Aquinas believed that it was specifically immoral to raise prices because a particular buyer had an urgent need for what was being sold and could be persuaded to pay a higher price because of local conditions If someone would be greatly helped by something belonging to someone else and the seller not similarly harmed by losing it the seller must not sell for a higher price because the usefulness that goes to the buyer comes not from the seller but from the buyer s needy condition no one ought to sell something that doesn t belong to him 71 Summa Theologiae 2 2 q 77 art 1 dd Aquinas would therefore condemn practices such as raising the price of building supplies in the wake of a natural disaster Increased demand caused by the destruction of existing buildings does not add to a seller s costs so to take advantage of buyers increased willingness to pay constituted a species of fraud in Aquinas s view 72 Five Ways Edit Saint Augustine of Hippo by Gerard Seghers attributed Further information Five Ways Aquinas Thomas believed that the existence of God is self evident in itself but not to us Therefore I say that this proposition God exists of itself is self evident for the predicate is the same as the subject Now because we do not know the essence of God the proposition is not self evident to us but needs to be demonstrated by things that are more known to us though less known in their nature namely by effects 73 Thomas believed that the existence of God can be demonstrated Briefly in the Summa theologiae and more extensively in the Summa contra Gentiles he considered in great detail five arguments for the existence of God widely known as the quinque viae Five Ways For detailed analysis of the five proofs see Existence of God For the original text of the five proofs see Quinque viae Motion Some things undoubtedly move though cannot cause their own motion Since as Thomas believed there can be no infinite chain of causes of motion there must be a First Mover not moved by anything else and this is what everyone understands by God Causation As in the case of motion nothing can cause itself and an infinite chain of causation is impossible so there must be a First Cause called God Existence of necessary and the unnecessary Our experience includes things certainly existing but apparently unnecessary Not everything can be unnecessary for then once there was nothing and there would still be nothing Therefore we are compelled to suppose something that exists necessarily having this necessity only from itself in fact itself the cause for other things to exist Gradation If we can notice a gradation in things in the sense that some things are more hot good etc there must be a superlative that is the truest and noblest thing and so most fully existing This then we call God Ordered tendencies of nature A direction of actions to an end is noticed in all bodies following natural laws Anything without awareness tends to a goal under the guidance of one who is aware This we call God 74 Concerning the nature of God Thomas felt the best approach commonly called the via negativa is to consider what God is not This led him to propose five statements about the divine qualities God is simple without composition of parts such as body and soul or matter and form 75 God is perfect lacking nothing That is God is distinguished from other beings on account of God s complete actuality 76 Thomas defined God as the Ipse Actus Essendi subsistens subsisting act of being 77 God is infinite That is God is not finite in the ways that created beings are physically intellectually and emotionally limited This infinity is to be distinguished from infinity of size and infinity of number 78 God is immutable incapable of change on the levels of God s essence and character 79 God is one without diversification within God s self The unity of God is such that God s essence is the same as God s existence In Thomas s words in itself the proposition God exists is necessarily true for in it subject and predicate are the same 80 Impact Edit Aquinas shifted Scholasticism away from neoplatonism and towards Aristotle The ensuing school of thought through its influence on Latin Christianity and the ethics of the Catholic school is one of the most influential philosophies of all time also significant due to the number of people living by its teachings In theology his Summa Theologica is one of the most influential documents in medieval theology and continued into the 20th century to be the central point of reference for the philosophy and theology of Latin Christianity In the 1914 encyclical Doctoris Angelici 81 Pope Pius X cautioned that the teachings of the Catholic Church cannot be understood without the basic philosophical underpinnings of Aquinas major theses The capital theses in the philosophy of St Thomas are not to be placed in the category of opinions capable of being debated one way or another but are to be considered as the foundations upon which the whole science of natural and divine things is based if such principles are once removed or in any way impaired it must necessarily follow that students of the sacred sciences will ultimately fail to perceive so much as the meaning of the words in which the dogmas of divine revelation are proposed by the magistracy of the Church 82 The Second Vatican Council described Aquinas system as the Perennial Philosophy 83 Actus purus Edit Further information Palamism Hesychast controversy Hesychasm Barlaam of Seminara and Essence energies distinction Actus purus is the absolute perfection of God According to Scholasticism created beings have potentiality that is not actuality imperfections as well as perfection Only God is simultaneously all that He can be infinitely real and infinitely perfect I am who I am Exodus 3 14 His attributes or His operations are really identical with His essence and His essence necessitates His existence Lack of essence energies distinction Edit Later the Eastern Orthodox ascetic and archbishop of Thessaloniki Saint Gregory Palamas argued in defense of hesychast spirituality the uncreated character of the light of the Transfiguration and the distinction between God s essence and energies His teaching unfolded over the course of three major controversies 1 with the Italo Greek Barlaam between 1336 and 1341 2 with the monk Gregory Akindynos between 1341 and 1347 and 3 with the philosopher Gregoras from 1348 to 1355 His theological contributions are sometimes referred to as Palamism and his followers as Palamites Historically Latin Christianity has tended to reject Palamism especially the essence energies distinction some times characterizing it as a heretical introduction of an unacceptable division in the Trinity and suggestive of polytheism 84 85 Further the associated practice of hesychasm used to achieve theosis was characterized as magic 86 87 More recently some Roman Catholic thinkers have taken a positive view of Palamas s teachings including the essence energies distinction arguing that it does not represent an insurmountable theological division between Roman Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy 88 and his feast day as a saint is celebrated by some Byzantine Catholic churches in communion with Rome 89 90 The rejection of Palamism by the West and by those in the East who favoured union with the West the Latinophrones actually contributed to its acceptance in the East according to Martin Jugie who adds Very soon Latinism and Antipalamism in the minds of many would come to be seen as one and the same thing 91 Filioque Edit Further information History of the Filioque controversy TheFather TheSon TheHolySpirit The Shield of the Trinity or Scutum Fidei diagram of traditional medieval Western Christian symbolismFilioque is a Latin term added to the original Nicene Creed and which has been the subject of great controversy between Eastern and Western Christianity It is not in the original text of the Creed attributed to the First Council of Constantinople 381 the second ecumenical council which says that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father without additions of any kind such as and the Son or alone 92 The phrase Filioque first appears as an anti Arian 93 94 interpolation in the Creed at the Third Council of Toledo 589 at which Visigothic Spain renounced Arianism accepting Catholic Christianity The addition was confirmed by subsequent local councils in Toledo and soon spread throughout the West not only in Spain but also in the kingdom of the Franks who had adopted the Catholic faith in 496 95 and in England where the Council of Hatfield imposed it in 680 as a response to Monothelitism 96 However it was not adopted in Rome In the late 6th century some Latin churches added the words and from the Son Filioque to the description of the procession of the Holy Spirit in what many Eastern Orthodox Christians have at a later stage argued is a violation of Canon VII of the Council of Ephesus since the words were not included in the text by either the First Council of Nicaea or that of Constantinople 97 This was incorporated into the liturgical practice of Rome in 1014 98 but was rejected by Eastern Christianity Whether that term Filioque is included as well as how it is translated and understood can have important implications for how one understands the doctrine of the Trinity which is central to the majority of Christian churches For some the term implies a serious underestimation of God the Father s role in the Trinity for others denial of what it expresses implies a serious underestimation of the role of God the Son in the Trinity The Filioque phrase has been included in the Creed throughout all the Latin Rite except where Greek is used in the liturgy 99 100 although it was never adopted by Eastern Catholic Churches 101 Purgatory Edit Further information History of purgatory and Three states of the Church Impression of purgatory by Peter Paul Rubens Perhaps the most peculiar doctrine of Latin Christianity is purgatory about which Latin Christianity holds that all who die in God s grace and friendship but still imperfectly purified undergo the process of purification which the Catholic Church calls purgatory so as to achieve the holiness necessary to enter the joy of heaven It has formulated this doctrine by reference to biblical verses that speak of purifying fire 1 Corinthians 3 15 and 1 Peter 1 7 and to the mention by Jesus of forgiveness in the age to come Matthew 12 32 It bases its teaching also on the practice of praying for the dead in use within the church ever since the church began and which is mentioned even earlier in 2 Macc 12 46 102 103 The idea of purgatory has roots that date back into antiquity A sort of proto purgatory called the celestial Hades appears in the writings of Plato and Heraclides Ponticus and in many other pagan writers This concept is distinguished from the Hades of the underworld described in the works of Homer and Hesiod In contrast the celestial Hades was understood as an intermediary place where souls spent an undetermined time after death before either moving on to a higher level of existence or being reincarnated back on earth Its exact location varied from author to author Heraclides of Pontus thought it was in the Milky Way the Academicians the Stoics Cicero Virgil Plutarch the Hermetical writings situated it between the Moon and the Earth or around the Moon while Numenius and the Latin Neoplatonists thought it was located between the sphere of the fixed stars and the Earth 104 Perhaps under the influence of Hellenistic thought the intermediate state entered Jewish religious thought in the last centuries before Christ In Maccabees we find the practice of prayer for the dead with a view to their after life purification 105 a practice accepted by some Christians The same practice appears in other traditions such as the medieval Chinese Buddhist practice of making offerings on behalf of the dead who are said to suffer numerous trials 106 Among other reasons Western Catholic teaching of purgatory is based on the pre Christian Judaic practice of prayers for the dead 107 Image of a fiery purgatory by Ludovico Carracci Specific examples of belief in a purification after death and of the communion of the living with the dead through prayer are found in many of the Church Fathers 108 Irenaeus c 130 202 mentioned an abode where the souls of the dead remained until the universal judgment a process that has been described as one which contains the concept of purgatory 109 Both Clement of Alexandria c 150 215 and his pupil Origen of Alexandria c 185 254 developed a view of purification after death 110 this view drew upon the notion that fire is a divine instrument from the Old Testament and understood this in the context of New Testament teachings such as baptism by fire from the Gospels and a purificatory trial after death from St Paul 111 Origen in arguing against soul sleep stated that the souls of the elect immediately entered paradise unless not yet purified in which case they passed into a state of punishment a penal fire which is to be conceived as a place of purification 112 For both Clement and Origen the fire was neither a material thing nor a metaphor but a spiritual fire 113 The early Latin author Tertullian c 160 225 also articulated a view of purification after death 114 In Tertullian s understanding of the afterlife the souls of martyrs entered directly into eternal blessedness 115 whereas the rest entered a generic realm of the dead There the wicked suffered a foretaste of their eternal punishments 115 whilst the good experienced various stages and places of bliss wherein the idea of a kind of purgatory is quite plainly found an idea that is representative of a view widely dispersed in antiquity 116 Later examples wherein further elaborations are articulated include St Cyprian d 258 117 St John Chrysostom c 347 407 118 and St Augustine 354 430 119 among others Pope Gregory the Great s Dialogues written in the late 6th century evidence a development in the understanding of the afterlife distinctive of the direction that Latin Christendom would take As for certain lesser faults we must believe that before the Final Judgment there is a purifying fire He who is truth says that whoever utters blasphemy against the Holy Spirit will be pardoned neither in this age nor in the age to come From this sentence we understand that certain offenses can be forgiven in this age but certain others in the age to come 120 Speculations and imaginings about purgatory Edit Dante gazes at purgatory shown as a mountain in this 16th century painting Some Catholic saints and theologians have had sometimes conflicting ideas about purgatory beyond those adopted by the Catholic Church reflecting or contributing to the popular image which includes the notions of purification by actual fire in a determined place and for a precise length of time Paul J Griffiths notes Recent Catholic thought on purgatory typically preserves the essentials of the basic doctrine while also offering second hand speculative interpretations of these elements 121 Thus Joseph Ratzinger wrote Purgatory is not as Tertullian thought some kind of supra worldly concentration camp where man is forced to undergo punishment in a more or less arbitrary fashion Rather it is the inwardly necessary process of transformation in which a person becomes capable of Christ capable of God and thus capable of unity with the whole communion of saints 122 In Theological Studies John E Thiel argued that purgatory virtually disappeared from Catholic belief and practice since Vatican II because it has been based on a competitive spirituality gravitating around the religious vocation of ascetics from the late Middle Ages The birth of purgatory negotiated the eschatological anxiety of the laity In a manner similar to the ascetic s lifelong lengthening of the temporal field of competition with the martyr belief in purgatory lengthened the layperson s temporal field of competition with the ascetic 123 The speculations and popular imaginings that especially in late medieval times were common in the Western or Latin Church have not necessarily found acceptance in the Eastern Catholic Churches of which there are 23 in full communion with the Pope Some have explicitly rejected the notions of punishment by fire in a particular place that are prominent in the popular picture of purgatory The representatives of the Eastern Orthodox Church at the Council of Florence argued against these notions while declaring that they do hold that there is a cleansing after death of the souls of the saved and that these are assisted by the prayers of the living If souls depart from this life in faith and charity but marked with some defilements whether unrepented minor ones or major ones repented of but without having yet borne the fruits of repentance we believe that within reason they are purified of those faults but not by some purifying fire and particular punishments in some place 124 The definition of purgatory adopted by that council excluded the two notions with which the Orthodox disagreed and mentioned only the two points that they said were part of their faith also Accordingly the agreement known as the Union of Brest that formalized the admission of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church into the full communion of the Roman Catholic Church stated We shall not debate about purgatory but we entrust ourselves to the teaching of the Holy Church 125 Mary Magdalene of Bethany Edit Further information Mary of Bethany Medieval Western identification with Mary Magdalene See also Mary Magdalene The Penitent Magdalene by Guido Reni In the medieval Western tradition Mary of Bethany the sister of Lazarus was identified as Mary Magdalene perhaps in large part because of a homily given by Pope Gregory the Great in which he taught about several women in the New Testament as though they were the same person This led to a conflation of Mary of Bethany with Mary Magdalene as well as with another woman besides Mary of Bethany who anointed Jesus the woman caught in adultery Eastern Christianity never adopted this identification In his article in the 1910 Catholic Encyclopedia Hugh Pope stated The Greek Fathers as a whole distinguish the three persons the sinner of Luke 7 36 50 the sister of Martha and Lazarus Luke 10 38 42 and John 11 and Mary Magdalen 126 French scholar Victor Saxer dates the identification of Mary Magdalene as a prostitute and as Mary of Bethany to a sermon by Pope Gregory the Great on September 21 AD 591 where he seemed to combine the actions of three women mentioned in the New Testament and also identified an unnamed woman as Mary Magdalene In another sermon Gregory specifically identified Mary Magdalene as the sister of Martha mentioned in Luke 10 127 But according to a view expressed more recently by theologian Jane Schaberg Gregory only put the final touch to a legend that already existed before him 128 Latin Christianity s identification of Mary Magdalene and Mary of Bethany was reflected in the arrangement of the General Roman Calendar until this was altered in 1969 129 reflecting the fact that by then the common interpretation in the Catholic Church was that Mary of Bethany Mary Magdalene and the sinful woman who anointed the feet of Jesus were three distinct women 130 Original sin Edit Further information Original sin See also Hamartiology The Catechism of the Catholic Church says By his sin Adam as the first man lost the original holiness and justice he had received from God not only for himself but for all humans Adam and Eve transmitted to their descendants human nature wounded by their own first sin and hence deprived of original holiness and justice this deprivation is called original sin As a result of original sin human nature is weakened in its powers subject to ignorance suffering and the domination of death and inclined to sin this inclination is called concupiscence 131 Michelangelo s painting of the sin of Adam and Eve from the Sistine Chapel ceiling The concept of original sin was first alluded to in the 2nd century by St Irenaeus Bishop of Lyon in his controversy with certain dualist Gnostics 132 Other church fathers such as Augustine also shaped and developed the doctrine 133 134 seeing it as based on the New Testament teaching of Paul the Apostle Romans 5 12 21 and 1 Corinthians 15 21 22 and the Old Testament verse of Psalm 51 5 135 136 137 138 139 Tertullian Cyprian Ambrose and Ambrosiaster considered that humanity shares in Adam s sin transmitted by human generation Augustine s formulation of original sin after AD 412 was popular among Protestant reformers such as Martin Luther and John Calvin who equated original sin with concupiscence or hurtful desire affirming that it persisted even after baptism and completely destroyed freedom to do good Before 412 Augustine said that free will was weakened but not destroyed by original sin 134 But after 412 this changed to a loss of free will except to sin 140 Modern Augustinian Calvinism holds this later view The Jansenist movement which the Catholic Church declared to be heretical also maintained that original sin destroyed freedom of will 141 Instead the Western Catholic Church declares Baptism by imparting the life of Christ s grace erases original sin and turns a man back towards God but the consequences for nature weakened and inclined to evil persist in man and summon him to spiritual battle 142 Weakened and diminished by Adam s fall free will is yet not destroyed in the race 143 St Anselm says The sin of Adam was one thing but the sin of children at their birth is quite another the former was the cause the latter is the effect 144 In a child original sin is distinct from the fault of Adam it is one of its effects The effects of Adam s sin according to the Catholic Encyclopedia are Death and Suffering One man has transmitted to the whole human race not only the death of the body which is the punishment of sin but even sin itself which is the death of the soul Concupiscence or Inclination to sin Baptism erases original sin but the inclination to sin remains The absence of sanctifying grace in the new born child is also an effect of the first sin for Adam having received holiness and justice from God lost it not only for himself but also for us Baptism confers original sanctifying grace lost through the Adam s sin thus eliminating original sin and any personal sin 145 Eastern Catholics and Eastern Christianity in general do not have the same theology of the Fall and original sin as Latin Catholics 146 But since Vatican II there has been development in Catholic thinking Some warn against taking Genesis 3 too literally They take into account that God had the church in mind before the foundation of the world as in Ephesians 1 4 147 as also in 2 Timothy 1 9 his own purpose and grace which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began 148 And Pope Benedict XVI in his book In the Beginning referred to the term original sin as misleading and unprecise 149 Benedict does not require a literal interpretation of Genesis or of the origin or evil but writes How was this possible how did it happen This remains obscure Evil remains mysterious It has been presented in great images as does chapter 3 of Genesis with the vision of two trees of the serpent of sinful man 150 151 Immaculate Conception Edit Inmaculada Concepcion by Juan Antonio de Frias y Escalante The Immaculate Conception is the conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary free from original sin by virtue of the merits of her son Jesus Although the belief has been widely held since Late Antiquity the doctrine was dogmatically defined in the Catholic Church only in 1854 when Pope Pius IX declared it ex cathedra i e using papal infallibility in his papal bull Ineffabilis Deus 152 It is admitted that the doctrine as defined by Pius IX was not explicitly noted before the 12th century It is also agreed that no direct or categorical and stringent proof of the dogma can be brought forward from Scripture 153 But it is claimed that the doctrine is implicitly contained in the teaching of the Fathers Their expressions on the subject of the sinlessness of Mary are it is pointed out so ample and so absolute that they must be taken to include original sin as well as actual Thus in the first five centuries such epithets as in every respect holy in all things unstained super innocent and singularly holy are applied to her she is compared to Eve before the fall as ancestress of a redeemed people she is the earth before it was accursed The well known words of St Augustine d 430 may be cited As regards the mother of God he says I will not allow any question whatever of sin It is true that he is here speaking directly of actual or personal sin But his argument is that all men are sinners that they are so through original depravity that this original depravity may be overcome by the grace of God and he adds that he does not know but that Mary may have had sufficient grace to overcome sin of every sort omni ex parte 154 Bernard of Clairvaux in the 12th century raised the question of the Immaculate Conception A feast of the Conception of the Blessed Virgin had already begun to be celebrated in some churches of the West St Bernard blames the canons of the metropolitan church of Lyon for instituting such a festival without the permission of the Holy See In doing so he takes occasion to repudiate altogether the view that the conception of Mary was sinless calling it a novelty Some doubt however whether he was using the term conception in the same sense in which it is used in the definition of Pope Pius IX Bernard would seem to have been speaking of conception in the active sense of the mother s cooperation for in his argument he says How can there be absence of sin where there is concupiscence libido and stronger expressions follow which could be interpreted to indicate that he was speaking of the mother and not of the child Yet Bernard also decries those who support the feast for trying to add to the glories of Mary which proves he was indeed talking about Mary 154 The theological underpinnings of Immaculate Conception had been the subject of debate during the Middle Ages with opposition provided by figures such as Saint Thomas Aquinas a Dominican However supportive arguments by Franciscans William of Ware and Pelbartus Ladislaus of Temesvar 155 and general belief among Catholics made the doctrine more acceptable so that the Council of Basel supported it in the 15th century but the Council of Trent sidestepped the question Pope Sixtus IV a Franciscan had tried to pacify the situation by forbidding either side to criticize the other and placed the feast of the Immaculate Conception on the Roman Calendar in 1477 but Pope Pius V a Dominican changed it to the feast of the Conception of Mary Clement XI made the feast universal in 1708 but still did not call it the feast of the Immaculate Conception 156 Popular and theological support for the concept continued to grow and by the 18th century it was widely depicted in art 157 158 159 160 Duns Scotus Edit See also Scotism and Duns Scotus John Duns Scotus was one of the Scholastic philosophers that argued most for the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary The Blessed John Duns Scotus d 1308 a Friar Minor like Saint Bonaventure argued that from a rational point of view it was certainly as little derogatory to the merits of Christ to assert that Mary was by him preserved from all taint of sin as to say that she first contracted it and then was delivered 154 Proposing a solution to the theological problem of reconciling the doctrine with that of universal redemption in Christ he argued that Mary s immaculate conception did not remove her from redemption by Christ rather it was the result of a more perfect redemption granted her because of her special role in salvation history 161 The arguments of Scotus combined with a better acquaintance with the language of the early Fathers gradually prevailed in the schools of the Western Church In 1387 the university of Paris strongly condemned the opposite view 154 Scotus s arguments remained controversial however particularly among the Dominicans who were willing enough to celebrate Mary s sanctificatio being made free from sin but following the Dominican Thomas Aquinas arguments continued to insist that her sanctification could not have occurred until after her conception 153 Scotus pointed out that Mary s Immaculate Conception enhances Jesus redemptive work 162 Scotus s argument appears in Pope Pius IX s 1854 declaration of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception at the first moment of Her conception Mary was preserved free from the stain of original sin in view of the merits of Jesus Christ 163 Scotus s position was hailed as a correct expression of the faith of the Apostles 163 Dogmatically defined Edit The complete defined dogma of the Immaculate Conception states We declare pronounce and define that the doctrine which holds that the most Blessed Virgin Mary in the first instance of her conception by a singular grace and privilege granted by Almighty God in view of the merits of Jesus Christ the Saviour of the human race was preserved free from all stain of original sin is a doctrine revealed by God and therefore to be believed firmly and constantly by all the faithful 164 Declaramus pronuntiamus et definimus doctrinam quae tenet beatissimam Virginem Mariam in primo instanti suae Conceptionis fuisse singulari omnipotentis Dei gratia et privilegio intuitu meritorum Christi lesu Salvatoris humani generis ab omni originalis culpae labe praeservatam immunem esse a Deo revelatam atque idcirco ab omnibus fidelibus firmiter constanterque credendam Quapropter si qui secus ac a Nobis Pope Pius IX explicitly affirmed that Mary was redeemed in a manner more sublime He stated that Mary rather than being cleansed after sin was completely prevented from contracting original sin in view of the foreseen merits of Jesus Christ the Savior of the human race In Luke 1 47 Mary proclaims My spirit has rejoiced in God my Saviour This is referred to as Mary s pre redemption by Christ Since the Second Council of Orange against semi pelagianism the Catholic Church has taught that even had man never sinned in the Garden of Eden and was sinless he would still require God s grace to remain sinless 165 166 The definition concerns original sin only and it makes no declaration about the church s belief that the Blessed Virgin was sinless in the sense of freedom from actual or personal sin 154 The doctrine teaches that from her conception Mary being always free from original sin received the sanctifying grace that would normally come with baptism after birth Eastern Catholics and Eastern Christianity in general believe that Mary was sinless but they do not have the same theology of the Fall and original sin as Latin Catholics 146 Assumption of Mary Edit The Assumption of Mary Peter Paul Rubens c 1626 The Assumption of Mary into Heaven often shortened to the Assumption is the bodily taking up of the Virgin Mary into Heaven at the end of her earthly life On 1 November 1950 in the Apostolic Constitution Munificentissimus Deus Pope Pius XII declared the Assumption of Mary as a dogma By the authority of our Lord Jesus Christ of the Blessed Apostles Peter and Paul and by our own authority we pronounce declare and define it to be a divinely revealed dogma that the Immaculate Mother of God the ever Virgin Mary having completed the course of her earthly life was assumed body and soul into heavenly glory 167 In Pius XII s dogmatic statement the phrase having completed the course of her earthly life leaves open the question of whether the Virgin Mary died before her assumption or not Mary s assumption is said to have been a divine gift to her as the Mother of God Ludwig Ott s view is that as Mary completed her life as a shining example to the human race the perspective of the gift of assumption is offered to the whole human race 168 Ludwig Ott writes in his book Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma that the fact of her death is almost generally accepted by the Fathers and Theologians and is expressly affirmed in the Liturgy of the Church to which he adds a number of helpful citations He concludes for Mary death in consequence of her freedom from original sin and from personal sin was not a consequence of punishment of sin However it seems fitting that Mary s body which was by nature mortal should be in conformity with that of her Divine Son subject to the general law of death 169 Titian s Assumption 1516 1518 The point of her bodily death has not been infallibly defined by any pope Many Catholics believe that she did not die at all but was assumed directly into Heaven The dogmatic definition within the Apostolic Constitution Munificentissimus Deus which according to Roman Catholic dogma infallibly proclaims the doctrine of the Assumption leaves open the question of whether in connection with her departure Mary underwent bodily death It does not dogmatically define the point one way or the other as shown by the words having completed the course of her earthly life 170 Before the dogmatic definition in Deiparae Virginis Mariae Pope Pius XII sought the opinion of Catholic Bishops A large number of them pointed to the Book of Genesis 3 15 as scriptural support for the dogma 171 In Munificentissimus Deus item 39 Pius XII referred to the struggle against the infernal foe as in Genesis 3 15 and to complete victory over the sin and death as in the Letters of Paul as a scriptural basis for the dogmatic definition Mary being assumed to heaven as in 1 Corinthians 15 54 then shall come to pass the saying that is written Death is swallowed up in victory 171 172 Assumption vs Dormition Edit See also John of Damascus The Western Feast of the Assumption is celebrated on 15 August and the Eastern Orthodox and Greek Catholics celebrate the Dormition of the Mother of God or Dormition of the Theotokos the falling asleep of the Mother of God on the same date preceded by a 14 day fast period Eastern Christians believe that Mary died a natural death that her soul was received by Christ upon death and that her body was resurrected on the third day after her death and that she was taken up into heaven bodily in anticipation of the general resurrection Her tomb was found empty on the third day Icon of the Dormition by Theophan the Greek 1392 Orthodox tradition is clear and unwavering in regard to the central point of the Dormition the Holy Virgin underwent as did her Son a physical death but her body like His was afterwards raised from the dead and she was taken up into heaven in her body as well as in her soul She has passed beyond death and judgement and lives wholly in the Age to Come The Resurrection of the Body has in her case been anticipated and is already an accomplished fact That does not mean however that she is dissociated from the rest of humanity and placed in a wholly different category for we all hope to share one day in that same glory of the Resurrection of the Body which she enjoys even now 173 Many Catholics also believe that Mary first died before being assumed but they believe that she was miraculously resurrected before being assumed Others believe she was assumed bodily into Heaven without first dying 174 175 Either understanding may be legitimately held by Catholics with Eastern Catholics observing the Feast as the Dormition Many theologians note by way of comparison that in the Catholic Church the Assumption is dogmatically defined while in the Eastern Orthodox tradition the Dormition is less dogmatically than liturgically and mystically defined Such differences spring from a larger pattern in the two traditions wherein Catholic teachings are often dogmatically and authoritatively defined in part because of the more centralized structure of the Catholic Church while in Eastern Orthodoxy many doctrines are less authoritative 176 Ancient of Days Edit See also God the Father in Western art The Ancient of Days watercolor etching from 1794 by William Blake Ancient of Days is a name for God that appears in the Book of Daniel In an early Venetian school Coronation of the Virgin by Giovanni d Alemagna and Antonio Vivarini c 1443 God the Father is shown in the representation consistently used by other artists later namely as a patriarch with benign yet powerful countenance and with long white hair and a beard a depiction largely derived from and justified by the description of the Ancient of Days in the Old Testament the nearest approach to a physical description of God in the Old Testament 177 the Ancient of Days did sit whose garment was white as snow and the hair of his head like the pure wool his throne was like the fiery flame and his wheels as burning fire Daniel 7 9 St Thomas Aquinas recalls that some bring forward the objection that the Ancient of Days matches the person of the Father without necessarily agreeing with this statement himself 178 By the twelfth century depictions of a figure of God the Father essentially based on the Ancient of Days in the Book of Daniel had started to appear in French manuscripts and in stained glass church windows in England In the 14th century the illustrated Naples Bible had a depiction of God the Father in the Burning bush By the 15th century the Rohan Book of Hours included depictions of God the Father in human form or anthropomorphic imagery and by the time of the Renaissance artistic representations of God the Father were freely used in the Western Church 179 The Ancient of Days a 14th century fresco from Ubisi Georgia Artistic depictions of God the Father were uncontroversial in Catholic art thereafter but less common depictions of the Trinity were condemned In 1745 Pope Benedict XIV explicitly supported the Throne of Mercy depiction referring to the Ancient of Days but in 1786 it was still necessary for Pope Pius VI to issue a papal bull condemning the decision of an Italian church council to remove all images of the Trinity from churches 180 The depiction remains rare and often controversial in Eastern Orthodox art In Eastern Orthodox Church hymns and icons the Ancient of Days is most properly identified with God the Son or Jesus and not with God the Father Most of the eastern church fathers who comment on the passage in Daniel 7 9 10 13 14 interpreted the elderly figure as a prophetic revelation of the son before his physical incarnation 181 As such Eastern Christian art will sometimes portray Jesus Christ as an old man the Ancient of Days to show symbolically that he existed from all eternity and sometimes as a young man or wise baby to portray him as he was incarnate This iconography emerged in the 6th century mostly in the Eastern Empire with elderly images although usually not properly or specifically identified as the Ancient of Days 182 The first images of the Ancient of Days so named with an inscription were developed by iconographers in different manuscripts the earliest of which are dated to the 11th century The images in these manuscripts included the inscription Jesus Christ Ancient of Days confirming that this was a way to identify Christ as pre eternal with the God the Father 183 Indeed later it was declared by the Russian Orthodox Church at the Great Synod of Moscow in 1667 that the Ancient of Days was the Son and not the Father 184 Social and cultural issues EditSexual abuse cases Edit Main article Catholic Church sexual abuse cases From the 1990s the issue of sexual abuse of minors by Western Catholic clergy and other church members has become the subject of civil litigation criminal prosecution media coverage and public debate in countries around the world The Western Catholic Church has been criticised for its handling of abuse complaints when it became known that some bishops had shielded accused priests transferring them to other pastoral assignments where some continued to commit sexual offences In response to the scandal formal procedures have been established to help prevent abuse encourage the reporting of any abuse that occurs and to handle such reports promptly although groups representing victims have disputed their effectiveness 185 In 2014 Pope Francis instituted the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors for the safeguarding of minors 186 See also Edit Catholicism portalEarly African church Counter Reformation Latin Church in the Middle East Latin liturgical rites Ecclesiastical Latin Liturgical use of Latin James the Great Spain Paul the Apostle Journey from Rome to Spain Saint Peter Connection to Rome General Roman Calendar East West Schism Eastern ChristianityNotes Edit The term Roman Catholic Church is also used to refer to the Catholic Church as a whole especially in a non Catholic context while also occasionally used in reference to the Latin Church vis a vis the Eastern Catholic Churches Do you know differences between Roman Byzantine Catholic Churches The Compass 2011 11 30 Retrieved 2021 04 08 References Edit Marshall Thomas William 1844 Notes of the Episcopal Polity of the Holy Catholic Church London Levey Rossen and Franklin Larissa L Lopez 26 March 2020 Number of Catholics in World Grows There Are More Than 1 3 Billion zenit org Retrieved 11 April 2020 a b Fortescue Adrian 1910 Latin Church Catholic Encyclopedia no doubt by a further extension Roman Church may be used as equivalent to Latin Church for the patriarchate Fr Adrian Fortescue The Mass A Study of the Roman Liturgy s l 1912 p 213 Faris John D 2002 The Latin Church Sui Iuris Jurist 62 280 Ashni A L Santhosh R December 2019 Catholic Church Fishers and Negotiating Development A Study on the Vizhinjam Port Project Review of Development and Change 24 2 187 204 doi 10 1177 0972266119883165 ISSN 0972 2661 S2CID 213671195 Turner Paul 2007 When other Christians become Catholic Liturgical Press p 141 ISBN 978 0 8146 6216 8 When other Christians become Catholic the individual becomes Eastern Catholic not Roman Catholic Holy Bible Matthew 16 19 CCEO canon 27 w2 vatican va Retrieved 1 April 2019 CCEO canon 28 1 Code of Canon Law canons 383 2 www vatican va Retrieved 1 April 2019 450 1 476 479 2 1021 Rite Merriam Webster Dictionary Rite Collins English Dictionary Glossary of Church Terms usccb org Archived from the original on 6 July 2013 Retrieved 1 April 2019 Decree on the Eastern Rite Orientalium Ecclesiarum 2 Orientalium Ecclesiarum 10 William W Bassett The Determination of Rite an Historical and Juridical Study Gregorian University Bookshop 1967 ISBN 978 88 7652129 4 p 73 Library of Congress Classification KBS Table 2 PDF loc gov Retrieved 1 April 2019 a b Fortescue Adrian 1910 Latin Church In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Rowland Tracey 2008 Ratzinger s Faith The Theology of Pope Benedict XVI Oxford University Press ISBN 9780191623394 Retrieved 24 November 2017 Codes of Canon Law The Holy See Archive www vatican va Retrieved 1 April 2019 Code of Canon Law canon 889 2 www vatican va Retrieved 1 April 2019 Code of Canon Law canon 913 1 www vatican va Retrieved 1 April 2019 Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches canons 695 1 and 710 w2 vatican va Retrieved 1 April 2019 Code of Canon Law canon 277 1 www vatican va Retrieved 1 April 2019 Anglicanorum coetibus VI 1 2 w2 vatican va Retrieved 1 April 2019 Code of Canon Law canon 1042 www vatican va Retrieved 1 April 2019 Code of Canon Law canon 1087 www vatican va Retrieved 1 April 2019 TeSelle Eugene 1970 Augustine the Theologian London pp 347 349 ISBN 978 0 223 97728 0 2002 ISBN 1 57910 918 7 Wilken Robert L 2003 The Spirit of Early Christian Thought New Haven Yale University Press p 291 ISBN 978 0 300 10598 8 Durant Will 1992 Caesar and Christ a History of Roman Civilization and of Christianity from Their Beginnings to A D 325 New York MJF Books ISBN 978 1 56731 014 6 Augustine Confessions Book 7 9 13 14 De immortalitate animae of Augustine text translation and commentary By Saint Augustine Bishop of Hippo C W Wolfskeel introduction 1 John 1 14 Handboek Geschiedenis van de Wijsbegeerte I Article by Douwe Runia the Athenian Athenagoras A Plea for the Christians New advent Flinn Frank K and Melton J Gordon 2007 Encyclopedia of Catholicism Facts on File Encyclopedia of World Religions ISBN 978 0 8160 5455 8 p 4 Kristin Luker 1985 Abortion and the Politics of Motherhood University of California Press ISBN 978 0 5209 0792 8 p 12 a b Bauerschmidt John C 1999 Abortion In Fitzgerald Allan D ed Augustine Through the Ages An Encyclopedia Wm B Eerdmans p 1 ISBN 978 0 8028 3843 8 Respect for Unborn Human Life the Church s Constant Teaching U S Conference of Catholic Bishops Chapter 5 Against the Title of the Epistle of Manichaeus Christian Classics Ethereal Library Retrieved 21 November 2008 Russell Book II Chapter IV Mendelson Michael 2000 03 24 Saint Augustine The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 21 December 2012 Some Underlying Positions of This Website www romanity org Retrieved 2015 09 30 Limits of Church www fatheralexander org Retrieved 2015 09 30 a b c Papademetriou George C Saint Augustine in the Greek Orthodox Tradition goarch org Archived 5 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine Siecienski Anthony Edward 2010 The Filioque History of a Doctrinal Controversy Oxford University Press pp 53 67 ISBN 978 0195372045 Augustine of Hippo in orthodoxwiki org Kappes Christiaan 2015 09 30 Gregory Palamas Use of Augustine s De Trinitate for Original Sin and its Application to the Theotokos amp Scholarius Palamitico Augustinianism of the Immaculate Conception Stockholm 28 VI 15 Stockholm University Press a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Archimandrite Book Review The Place of Blessed Augustine in the Orthodox Church Orthodox Tradition II 3 amp 4 40 43 Archived from the original on 10 July 2007 Retrieved 28 June 2007 Diarmaid MacCulloch 2010 A History of Christianity The First Three Thousand Years Penguin Books p 319 ISBN 978 0 14 102189 8 Lindberg David C 1978 Science in the Middle Ages Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 70 72 ISBN 978 0 226 48232 3 Grant Edward and Emeritus Edward Grant The foundations of modern science in the Middle Ages their religious institutional and intellectual contexts Cambridge University Press 1996 23 28 Hammond Jay Wayne Hellmann and Jared Goff eds A companion to Bonaventure Brill 2014 122 Evans Gillian Rosemary Fifty key medieval thinkers Routledge 2002 93 93 147 149 164 169 Gracia Jorge JE and Timothy B Noone eds A companion to philosophy in the middle ages John Wiley amp Sons 2008 353 369 494 503 696 712 Rev Vaughan Roger Bede 1871 The Life and Labours of St Thomas of Aquin Vol I London Conway John Placid 1911 Saint Thomas Aquinas London See Pius XI Studiorum Ducem 11 29 June 1923 AAS XV non modo Angelicum sed etiam Communem seu Universalem Ecclesiae Doctorem The title Doctor Communis dates to the fourteenth century the title Doctor Angelicus dates to the fifteenth century see Walz Xenia Thomistica III p 164 n 4 Tolomeo da Lucca writes in Historia Ecclesiastica 1317 This man is supreme among modern teachers of philosophy and theology and indeed in every subject And such is the common view and opinion so that nowadays in the University of Paris they call him the Doctor Communis because of the outstanding clarity of his teaching Historia Eccles xxiii c 9 Langston Douglas 5 February 2015 Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University via Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summa Theologica First Part of the Second Part Question 94 Reply Obj 2 Summa Question 94 A 3 Summa Q62a2 Ccel org Retrieved 2012 02 02 Summa Theologica Second Part of the Second Part Question 118 Article 1 Retrieved 26 October 2018 Thomas Aquinas Summa Theologica Of Cheating Which Is Committed in Buying and Selling Translated by The Fathers of the English Dominican Province 1 Retrieved 19 June 2012 Barry Gordon 1987 Aquinas St Thomas 1225 1274 v 1 p 100 Si vero aliquis multum iuvetur ex re alterius quam accepit ille vero qui vendidit non damnificatur carendo re illa non debet eam supervendere Quia utilitas quae alteri accrescit non est ex vendente sed ex conditione ementis nullus autem debet vendere alteri quod non est suum Aquinas Summa Theologica 2ª 2ae q 77 pr Deinde considerandum est de peccatis quae sunt circa voluntarias commutationes Et primo de fraudulentia quae committitur in emptionibus et venditionibus SUMMA THEOLOGIAE The existence of God Prima Pars Q 2 www newadvent org Summa of Theology I q 2 The Five Ways Philosophers Have Proven God s Existence Kreeft pp 74 77 Kreeft pp 86 87 See Actus Essendi See also Actus Essendi and the Habit of the First Principle in Thomas Aquinas New York Einsiedler Press 2019 and online resources Actus Essendi Electronic Journal Kreeft pp 97 99 Kreeft p 105 Kreeft pp 111 12 Doctoris Angelici Archived from the original on 31 August 2009 Retrieved 4 November 2009 Accessed 25 October 2012 Pope Pius X Doctoris Angelici 29 June 1914 Second Vatican Council Optatam Totius 28 October 1965 15 John Meyendorff editor Gregory Palamas The Triads p xi Paulist Press 1983 ISBN 978 0809124473 although that attitude has never been universally prevalent in the Catholic Church and has been even more widely criticised in the catholic theology for the last century see section 3 of this article Retrieved on 12 September 2014 No doubt the leaders of the party held aloof from these vulgar practices of the more ignorant monks but on the other hand they scattered broadcast perilous theological theories Palamas taught that by asceticism one could attain a corporal i e a sense view or perception of the Divinity He also held that in God there was a real distinction between the Divine Essence and Its attributes and he identified grace as one of the Divine propria making it something uncreated and infinite These monstrous errors were denounced by the Calabrian Barlaam by Nicephorus Gregoras and by Acthyndinus The conflict began in 1338 and ended only in 1368 with the solemn canonization of Palamas and the official recognition of his heresies He was declared the holy doctor and one of the greatest among the Fathers of the Church and his writings were proclaimed the infallible guide of the Christian Faith Thirty years of incessant controversy and discordant councils ended with a resurrection of polytheism Simon Vailhe 1909 Greek Church Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Fortescue Adrian 1910 Hesychasm vol VII New York Robert Appleton Company retrieved 2008 02 03 No doubt the leaders of the party held aloof from these vulgar practices of the more ignorant monks but on the other hand they scattered broadcast perilous theological theories Palamas taught that by asceticism one could attain a corporal i e a sense view or perception of the Divinity He also held that in God there was a real distinction between the Divine Essence and Its attributes and he identified grace as one of the Divine propria making it something uncreated and infinite These monstrous errors were denounced by the Calabrian Barlaam by Nicephorus Gregoras and by Acthyndinus The conflict began in 1338 and ended only in 1368 with the solemn canonization of Palamas and the official recognition of his heresies He was declared the holy doctor and one of the greatest among the Fathers of the Church and his writings were proclaimed the infallible guide of the Christian Faith Thirty years of incessant controversy and discordant councils ended with a resurrection of polytheism Simon Vailhe Greek Church in Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company 1909 Michael J Christensen Jeffery A Wittung editors Partakers of the Divine Nature Associated University Presses 2007 ISBN 0 8386 4111 3 pp 243 244 The Search For Sacred Quietude melkite org Second Sunday of the Great Fast Gregory Palamas sspp ca Martin Jugie The Palamite Controversy 13 June 2009 Retrieved 2010 12 27 Reformed Church in America Commission on Theology 2002 The Nicene Creed and the Procession of the Spirit In Cook James I ed The Church speaks papers of the Commission on Theology Reformed Church in America 1959 1984 Historical series of the Reformed Church in America Vol 40 Grand Rapids MI Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 80280980 3 Dale T Irvin Scott Sunquist History of the World Christian Movement 2001 Volume 1 p 340 Dix The Shape of the Liturgy 2005 p 487 The Conversion of Clovis Plested Filioque in John Anthony McGuckin The Encyclopedia of Eastern Orthodox Christianity Wiley John amp Sons 2011 ISBN 978 1 4051 8539 4 vol 1 p 251 For a different view see e g Excursus on the Words pistin ἑteran Greek and Latin Traditions on Holy Spirit Ewtn com Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity The Greek and the Latin Traditions regarding the Procession of the Holy Spirit and same document on another site Rwmaiko Leitoyrgiko Roman Missal Synodikh Epitroph gia th 8eia Latreia 2005 I p 347 Article 1 of the Treaty of Brest Catechism of the Catholic Church The Final Purification or Purgatory Pius IV Council of Trent 25 www ewtn com Adrian Mihai L Hades celeste Histoire du purgatoire dans l Antiquite Garnier 2015 pp 185 188 cf 2 Maccabees 12 42 44 Purgatory in Encyclopaedia Britannica Catechism of the Catholic Church 1032 Gerald O Collins and Edward G Farrugia A Concise Dictionary of Theology Edinburgh T amp T Clark 2000 p 27 Christian Dogmatics vol 2 Philadelphia Fortress Press 1984 p 503 cf Irenaeus Against Heresies 5 31 2 in The Ante Nicene Fathers eds Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson Grand Rapids Eerdmans 1979 1 560 cf 5 36 2 1 567 cf George Cross The Differentiation of the Roman and Greek Catholic Views of the Future Life in The Biblical World 1912 p 107 Gerald O Collins and Edward G Farrugia A Concise Dictionary of Theology Edinburgh T amp T Clark 2000 p 27 cf Adolph Harnack History of Dogma vol 2 trans Neil Buchanan London Williams amp Norgate 1995 p 337 Clement of Alexandria Stromata 6 14 Jacques Le Goff The Birth of Purgatory University of Chicago Press 1984 p 53 cf Leviticus 10 1 2 Deuteronomy 32 22 1Corinthians 3 10 15 Adolph Harnack History of Dogma vol 2 trans Neil Buchanan London Williams amp Norgate 1905 p 377 read online Jacques Le Goff The Birth of Purgatory University of Chicago Press 1984 pp 55 57 cf Clement of Alexandria Stromata 7 6 and 5 14 Gerald O Collins and Edward G Farrugia A Concise Dictionary of Theology Edinburgh T amp T Clark 2000 p 27 cf Adolph Harnack History of Dogma vol 2 trans Neil Buchanan London Williams amp Norgate 1995 p 296 n 1 George Cross The Differentiation of the Roman and Greek Catholic Views of the Future Life in The Biblical World 1912 Tertullian De Anima a b A J Visser A Bird s Eye View of Ancient Christian Eschatology in Numen 1967 p 13 Adolph Harnack History of Dogma vol 2 trans Neil Buchanan London Williams amp Norgate 1905 p 296 n 1 read online cf Jacques Le Goff The Birth of Purgatory University of Chicago Press 1984 pp 58 59 Cyprian Letters 51 20 Gerald O Collins and Edward G Farrugia A Concise Dictionary of Theology Edinburgh T amp T Clark 2000 p 27 John Chrysostom Homily on First Corinthians 41 5 Homily on Philippians 3 9 10 Gerald O Collins and Edward G Farrugia A Concise Dictionary of Theology Edinburgh T amp T Clark 2000 p 27 Augustine Sermons 159 1 172 2 City of God 21 13 Handbook on Faith Hope and Charity 18 69 29 109 Confessions 2 27 Gerald O Collins and Mario Farrugia Catholicism the story of Catholic Christianity Oxford Oxford University Press 2003 p 36 Gerald O Collins and Edward G Farrugia A Concise Dictionary of Theology Edinburgh T amp T Clark 2000 p 27 Gregory the Great Dialogues 4 39 PL 77 396 cf Matthew 12 31 Paul J Griffiths 2010 Purgatory In Jerry L Walls ed The Oxford Handbook of Eschatology Oxford University Press p 436 ISBN 9780199742486 Joseph Ratzinger 2007 Eschatology Death and Eternal Life CUA Press p 230 ISBN 9780813215167 Thiel John E 2008 Time Judgment and Competitive Spirituality A Reading of the Development of the Doctrine of Purgatory PDF Theological Studies 69 4 741 785 doi 10 1177 004056390806900401 S2CID 170574571 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 11 08 Retrieved 2020 07 05 First Speech by Mark Archbishop of Ephesus on Purifying Fire in Patrologia Orientalis vol 15 pp 40 41 Treaty of Brest Article 5 Pope H 1910 St Mary Magdalen in The Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company referenced in Jansen Katherine Ludwig 2001 The making of the Magdalen preaching and popular devotion in the later Middle Ages Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 08987 4 Rivera John 2003 04 18 John Rivera Restoring Mary Magdalene in Worldwide Religious News The Baltimore Sun April 18 2003 Wwrn org Retrieved 2018 04 05 Erwin Fahlbusch Geoffrey William Bromiley editors The Encyclopedia of Christianity Volume 3 Eerdmans 2003 ISBN 978 90 0412654 1 p 447 John Flader Question Time 150 Questions and Answers on the Catholic Faith Taylor Trade Publications 2010 ISBN 978 1 58979594 5 pp 79 81 Catechism of the Catholic Church IntraText Vatican va Retrieved 24 January 2017 In the person of the first Adam we offend God disobeying His precept Haeres V xvi 3 Patte Daniel The Cambridge Dictionary of Christianity Ed Daniel Patte New York Cambridge University Press 2010 892 a b Cross Frank Leslie Livingstone Elizabeth A eds 2005 Original sin The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church 3rd rev ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280290 3 Peter Nathan The Original View of Original Sin Vision org Retrieved 24 January 2017 Original Sin Explained and Defended Reply to an Assemblies of God Pastor Philvaz com Archived from the original on 29 July 2019 Retrieved 24 January 2017 Preamble and Articles of Faith Archived 20 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine V Sin Original and Personal Church of the Nazarene Retrieved 13 October 2013 Are Babies Born with Sin Archived 21 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Topical Bible Studies Retrieved 13 October 2013 Original Sin Psalm 51 5 Catholic News Agency Retrieved 13 October 2013 Wilson Kenneth 2018 Augustine s Conversion from Traditional Free Choice to Non free Free Will A Comprehensive Methodology Tubingen Mohr Siebeck pp 16 18 157 187 ISBN 9783161557538 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Jansenius and Jansenism Newadvent org 1 October 1910 Retrieved 24 January 2017 Catechism of the Catholic Church 405 Council of Trent Sess VI cap i and v De conceptu virginali xxvi CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Original Sin www newadvent org Retrieved 1 January 2018 a b Original Sin From East to West The Holy Spirit and the Trinity Part 1 Sermon www bibletools org Retrieved 2020 05 06 Before the World Began www icr org Retrieved 2020 05 06 Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger In the Beginning 1986 p 72 General Audience of 3 December 2008 Saint Paul 15 The Apostle s teaching on the relation between Adam and Christ BENEDICT XVI www vatican va Retrieved 2020 05 06 Pope ponders original sin speaks about modern desire for change Catholic News Agency Retrieved 2020 05 06 Catechism of the Catholic Church Conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary www vatican va a b Frederick Holweck Immaculate Conception in The Catholic Encyclopedia 1910 a b c d e One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Hedley John 1911 Immaculate Conception The In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 14 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 334 335 Z J Kosztolnyik Some Hungarian Theologians in the Late Renaissance Church History Volume 57 Issue 1 1988 Z J Kosztolnyik Pelbartus of Temesvar a Franciscan Preacher and Writer of the Late Middle Ages in Hungary Vivarium 5 1967 Kenan B Osborne O F M The History of Franciscan Theology The Franciscan Institute St Bonaventure New York 1994 Franklin H Littell ed Reformation Studies John Knox Press Richmond Virginia 1962 Edward Bouverie Pusey First letter to the Very Rev J H Newman J Parker amp Co 1869 p 379 Mary in the Christian tradition by Kathleen Coyle 1996 ISBN 0 85244 380 3 page 38 Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages Volume 2 by Andre Vauchez Richard Barrie Dobson 2001 ISBN 1 57958 282 6 page 348 Burke Raymond L et al 2008 Mariology A Guide for Priests Deacons Seminarians and Consecrated Persons ISBN 978 1 57918 355 4 pp 642 644 The Catholic Reformation by Michael A Mullett 1999 ISBN 0 415 18914 4 p 5 Encyclopedia of theology a concise Sacramentum mundi by Karl Rahner 2004 ISBN 0 86012 006 6 pp 896 898 Foley OFM Leonard Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception Saint of the Day revised by Pat McCloskey OFM AmericanCatholic org a b The Life of Blessed John Duns Scotus EWTN INEFFABILIS DEUS The Immaculate Conception Pope Pius IX ewtn com Council of Orange II Canon 19 Archived 2009 01 13 at the Wayback Machine That no one is saved except by God s mercy Even if human nature remained in that integrity in which it was formed it would in no way save itself without the help of its Creator therefore since without the grace of God it cannot guard the health which it received how without the grace of God will it be able to recover what it has lost Theology for Beginners by Francis Joseph Sheed 1958 ISBN 0 7220 7425 5 pp 134 138 Apostolic Constitution Munificentissimus Deus item 44 at the Vatican web site Archived 4 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine Ludwig Ott s Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma pp 250 ff Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma Ludwig Ott Book III Pt 3 Ch 2 6 ISBN 0 89555 009 1 Apostolic Constitution Munificentissimus Deus no 44 Vatican va Archived from the original on 4 September 2013 Retrieved 3 November 2013 a b Introduction to Mary by Mark Miravalle 1993 Queenship Pub Co ISBN 978 1 882972 06 7 pp 75 78 Paul Haffner in Mariology A Guide for Priests Deacons seminarians and Consecrated Persons 2008 ISBN 9781579183554 edited by M Miravalle pp 328 350 Bishop Kallistos Ware of Diokleia in Festal Menaion London Faber and Faber 1969 p 64 The Catholicism Answer Book The 300 Most Frequently Asked Questions by John Trigilio Kenneth Brighenti 2007 ISBN 1 4022 0806 5 p 64 Shoemaker 2006 p 201 See Three Sermons on the Dormition of the Virgin by John of Damascus from the Medieval Sourcebook Bigham Chapter 7 Summa Theologica III 59 1 obj 2 ad 2 George Ferguson 1996 Signs amp symbols in Christian art ISBN 0195014324 p 92 Bigham 73 76 McKay Gretchen K 1999 The Eastern Christian Exegetical Tradition of Daniel s Vision of the Ancient of Days Journal of Early Christian Studies 7 139 161 doi 10 1353 earl 1999 0019 S2CID 170245894 Cartlidge and Elliott 69 72 The manuscripts that include an image of the Ancient of Days are discussed in the unpublished dissertation by Gretchen Kreahling McKay Imaging the Divine A Study of the Representations of the Ancient of Days in Byzantine Manuscripts University of Virginia 1997 The Tome of the Great Council of Moscow 1666 1667 A D Ch 2 43 45 tr Hierodeacon Lev Puhalo Canadian Orthodox Missionary Journal David Willey 15 July 2010 Vatican speeds up abuse cases BBC News Retrieved 28 October 2010 Comunicato della Sala Stampa Istituzione della Pontificia Commissione per la Tutela dei Minori Holy See Press Office 22 March 2014 Retrieved 30 March 2014 External links EditOfficial website of the Holy See Latin Church in the Catholic Encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Latin Church amp oldid 1143336416, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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